Water Cooperation and Ideology in Local Communities

M. L. Khaneiki, A. Al-Ghafri
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Abstract

This article addresses how ideology affects local water governance, focusing on a groundwater basin in central Iran. It offers a case study of a symbiotic relationship between upstream and downstream communities, allowing a sustainable form of water governance. The cooler weather, better pastures and greater amount of precipitation of the basin upstream drew nomadic communities, whose economy was not dependent on irrigation. Downstream, fertile soil and warm weather favored agriculture with a high demand for water that was supplied by the groundwater transferred from the basin upstream. The exchange of livestock products and agricultural goods between the basin’s upstream and downstream areas systematically tied their economic systems. However, Iran’s 1979 revolution brought a hybrid leftist-Islamist ideology that unbalanced this traditional relationship through the reorganization of geographical space. The upstream communities were encouraged to cultivate their pastures, which led to a boom in the number of irrigation wells. The downstream villages were persuaded to adopt a new cropping pattern that turned most of their water-efficient vineyards into apricot orchards with high water demands. Therefore, an abrupt increase in water demand in the basin upstream and downstream thwarted the cooperation between the two areas and drove the basin into “the tragedy of the unmanaged commons.”
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地方社区的水合作与意识形态
本文以伊朗中部的一个地下水盆地为例,探讨意识形态如何影响当地的水治理。它提供了上游和下游社区之间共生关系的案例研究,允许可持续形式的水治理。上游盆地凉爽的气候、更好的牧场和更多的降水吸引了游牧社区,他们的经济不依赖灌溉。下游,肥沃的土壤和温暖的天气有利于农业,对水的需求很高,这些水由上游盆地转移的地下水提供。流域上下游地区之间畜产品和农产品的交换系统地联系了他们的经济系统。然而,伊朗1979年的革命带来了一种左翼与伊斯兰主义混合的意识形态,通过地理空间的重组使这种传统关系失衡。上游社区被鼓励耕种他们的牧场,这导致灌溉井的数量激增。下游村庄被说服采用一种新的种植模式,将大部分节水葡萄园变成需水量高的杏园。因此,流域上下游用水需求的突然增加阻碍了两个地区的合作,使流域陷入了“无管理公地的悲剧”。
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