Dissonance in customary and statutory water management institutions: issues of cultural diversity in the management of water resources in the Okavango Delta, Botswana
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Date
2018-01-30Author
Gondo, Reniko
Kolawole, Oluwatoyin, D.
Mbaiwa, Joseph E.
Publisher
Springer; https://link.springer.comRights
This article is published open access under a CC BY licence (Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence).Rights holder
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Customary institutions have existed in parallel with statutory institutions for
many years in Africa. These traditional water management systems were employed to
manage the use of water resources and resolve conflicts associated with them. Although
national governments introduced conventional water management approaches,which opera
ate more effectively in urban areas, customary institutions’ activities in water governance
continue to exist in rural Africa. Long before the advent of colonialism, most rural commu
nities which have now transformed into modern African societies had various rules, norms,
taboos and values governing the use of water. Although not legally recognised in the wake
of colonialism, the concept of legal pluralism has continued to gain ground in colonial
Africa. Rooted in the mass–elite theory and the cultural lag concept, the paper adopts a
critical literature review approach to explain the dissonance in customary and statutory
water management institutions in the Okavango Delta, Botswana. Analysis of existing
water management documents revealed that the post-independence statutory water institu
tions continue to weaken the customary approach to water use and management. Findings
indicate that statutory institutions emphasise on the economic conception of water despite
the fact that the resource has also a social value. This absolute conceptualisation of water
as an economic commodity creates the dissonance in water management, especially in
rural areas and most especially in the Okavango Delta where water is still perceived to have
cultural values.
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