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Implementing the integrated water resources management approach in a volcanic river basin: a case study of Opak Sub-Basin, Indonesia

Implementing the integrated water resources management approach in a volcanic river basin: a case... The ways in which integrated water resources management (IWRM) is implemented in a volcanic river basin (the Opak Sub-Basin) on the flanks of Mt Merapi volcano in Indonesia is examined. Data deriving from semi-ethnographic fieldwork and in-depth interviews are analysed through a multilevel governance lens that considers three pillars of management – conservation, utilization and hazard control – and three levels of governance – national, regional and municipal. The research shows that the regional level is the priority playing field; that the degree of integration differs between levels of government; and that actors called ‘whisperers’ support higher integration levels, have the greatest ability to form bridges between communities and government. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Area Development and Policy Taylor & Francis

Implementing the integrated water resources management approach in a volcanic river basin: a case study of Opak Sub-Basin, Indonesia

Implementing the integrated water resources management approach in a volcanic river basin: a case study of Opak Sub-Basin, Indonesia

Abstract

The ways in which integrated water resources management (IWRM) is implemented in a volcanic river basin (the Opak Sub-Basin) on the flanks of Mt Merapi volcano in Indonesia is examined. Data deriving from semi-ethnographic fieldwork and in-depth interviews are analysed through a multilevel governance lens that considers three pillars of management – conservation, utilization and hazard control – and three levels of governance – national, regional and municipal. The research...
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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2020 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
ISSN
2379-2957
eISSN
2379-2949
DOI
10.1080/23792949.2020.1726785
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

The ways in which integrated water resources management (IWRM) is implemented in a volcanic river basin (the Opak Sub-Basin) on the flanks of Mt Merapi volcano in Indonesia is examined. Data deriving from semi-ethnographic fieldwork and in-depth interviews are analysed through a multilevel governance lens that considers three pillars of management – conservation, utilization and hazard control – and three levels of governance – national, regional and municipal. The research shows that the regional level is the priority playing field; that the degree of integration differs between levels of government; and that actors called ‘whisperers’ support higher integration levels, have the greatest ability to form bridges between communities and government.

Journal

Area Development and PolicyTaylor & Francis

Published: Oct 1, 2020

Keywords: integrated water resources management; volcanic river basin; multilevel governance; interaction efforts; integration level;  ; 水资源综合治理; 火山河流盆地; 多层次治理; 相互努力; 综合水平; gestión integrada de los recursos hídricos; cuenca hidrográfica volcánica; gobernabilidad de varios niveles; esfuerzos de interacción; nivel de integración; интегрированное управление водными ресурсами; вулканический речной бассейн; многоуровневое управление; усилия по взаимодействию; уровень интеграции

References