Water Planning Tools

>> critical times <> practical measures <<

Archive for water policy

Indigenous Water Initiative

The Indigenous Water Initiative is a program of the Centre for Respect of Life and Environment which seeks to promote understanding and articulation of indigenous perspectives on water and development. The initiative grew out of the World Water Forum in Kyoto in March 2003, based on a series of sessions organised by CRLE on Indigenous water issues.

The Indigenous Water Initiative website is available here.

The overall objective of this website is to give voice to the perspectives of indigenous peoples on water-related issues, including water rights, agriculture, environmental health (related to water), religion and spirituality related to water, and sustainability of water resources.  The purpose of “giving voice” to indigenous perspectives goes beyond a simple appreciation of indigenous culture and beliefs; our objectives are both to empower indigenous communities through a sharing of knowledge and experience, and to enhance cross-cultural understanding and respect for different approaches to water and water development.  Both these objectives have practical and tangible expressions in the realm of improved legal frameworks, agricultural practices, water quality, health, etc.  The unique contribution of this initiative will be to engage indigenous peoples in expressing their own interpretations (perspectives) on water priorities and on what constitutes “improvements” and “progress” for their societies.

See the Indigenous Water Initiative website.

Related Links

Centre for Respect of Life and Environment

Water Law and Indigenous Rights Program, Wageningen University

Indigenous Environmental Network

Red Tape Preventing Sustainable Water Use

A new report released by the University of New England (UNE) has found government bureaucracy is preventing improvements in the use of water in Australia.

The inter-governmental National Water Initiative was created in 2004 to provide a simplified approach to water management.

But UNE researchers have found too much red tape is stifling sustainable water practices in regional and rural communities.

Dr Jacqueline Williams says there are too many government policies and they need to be reformed.

She says there needs to be a system that harmonises the market and regulatory instruments.

The results of the study, which was funded by the Cooperative Research Centre for Irrigation Futures, are presented in a report titled “Transaction costs and water reform: the devils hiding in the details”.

Download the report here…

External Links

ABC News Report

UNE Media Release

Water Governance: Legal and Policy Analysis

Volume Three

Water planning: a legal and policy analysis

This volume introduces and analyses the legal and policy framework within which collaborative water planning exists. This volume starts at the Commonwealth level looking at the Constitution and its role in water planning, as well as more recent policy and legislative aspects including the National Water Initiative; Native Title and Cultural Heritage legislation; water security planning and the Commonwealth Water Act (2007); legislative requirements at a State level; and generic features of water legislation. A description and analysis of the water planning legal framework state by state is also included. This state-by-state analysis emphasises aspects germane to collaborative water planning referred to in earlier volumes, including public participation, socio-economic values, Indigenous participation, tools for tradeoffs and monitoring and evaluation of the water planning process.

Water Planning Literature Review

Volume One

Collaborative Water Planning, Context and Practice: A Literature Review

Download the Collaborative Water Planning Literature Review (PDF, 1.61MB)

  • chronicles the history of water management in Australia, highlighting water policy and Council of Australian Governments (CoAG) reform in this area. It also outlines the biophysical characteristics of northern Australian rivers and catchments, their human history, current land and water use, and development pressures to which they are subject. The discussion locates water planning within the broader field of collaborative natural resource management (NRM), and introduces concepts germane to this topic including collaboration, power, citizen participation, social capital and social learning. The place of and limits to collaborative NRM are also discussed.
  • examines citizen participation in water planning processes from both international and Australian perspectives, particularly in light of current Australian water reform and the National Water Initiative. Various paradigms in water planning ranging from ad hoc, opportunistic planning; the development of large-scale, state-funded infrastructure development, through to the use of economic instruments and socio-economic assessments, nationally consistent entitlements, inclusion of environmental flow objectives and enhanced public participation are also summarised. The notion of a spectrum of increasing citizen participation is also discussed, as are the tensions evident in the National Water Initiative between regulatory, market-based and participatory planning paradigms.
  • discusses the treatment of values in NRM and water planning. It addresses the different meanings of value, sociological theories of value and methods of valuation, particularly the way decision makers recognise and understand values of various participants in water planning.
  • focuses on issues of Indigenous participation in water planning in Australia. The Australian Government National Water Initiative aims to address Indigenous interests in water through water planning processes. Several issues are identified including negotiating between the very different ways Indigenous and non-Indigenous people know, value and talk about water; differences in social, geographical and temporal scales; appropriate representation and structures for Indigenous participation in water planning; the need for adequate resourcing to allow effective Indigenous participation; and the need to redress power imbalances that disadvantage Indigenous people in decision making. The lack of any systematic studies of the outcomes of Indigenous involvement in water resource planning in Australia and the need to develop ways to address the issues identified above are emphasised.
  • explains a range of tools that may be used to reveal trade-offs – situations that involve decisions where each choice that may be made has both advantages and disadvantages. Tools discussed include multi-criteria evaluation; the citizens’ jury; deliberative multi-criteria evaluation; consensus conferencing; deliberative polls; and focus groups.
  • ‘problematises’ the notion of collaboration in water and natural resource planning and management, arguing that there is limited empirical evidence of the benefits of such an approach and an absence of an established framework from which to analyse and assess such evidence. A range of criteria, derived from the literature are presented as the basis for a monitoring and evaluation framework to assess collaboration in water resource planning.

Download the Collaborative Water Planning Literature Review (PDF, 1.61MB)