Dynamics of poverty, livelihoods and property rights in the lower Nyando basin of Kenya
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Publication Date
2005Author
Brent Swallow, Leah Onyango, Ruth Meinzen-Dick, Nienke Holl
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Much institutional analysis in the water sector at national as well as global levels has focused principally on
the working of law, policy and administration of water sector—the three pillars of water institutions. In New
Institutional Economics, these constitute the IE (IE) of the water economy, which is distinguished from
institutional arrangements (IA). The latter are humanly imposed ‘rules in use’ that govern the behavior of
water users and producers, and dealings between them. Water User Associations, pump irrigation markets,
fishery co-operatives and contractors, urban tanker water markets are examples of institutional
arrangements (IA). NIE’s central concern about ‘why economies fail to undertake appropriate activities if
they had a high pay-off’ is of great interest to actors in the IE —governments, NGOs, donors, policy makers,
legislators, local administrators. These therefore have views about and keen interest in shaping IA to
improve the working of the water economy. In this paper, we explore issues involved in unleashing
performance-enhancing change in IA’s