Uphoff Norman, Priti Ramamurthy, and Roy Steiner. Managing Irrigation: Analysing and Improving the Performance of Bureaucracies.
Hussain, Zakir
Uphoff Norman, Priti Ramamurthy, and Roy Steiner. Managing
Irrigation: Analysing and Improving the Performance of Bureaucracies.
New Delhi/Newbury Park/London: Sage Publications. 1991. Hardbound. Price
not given.
The book under review provides a valuable account of the issues and
factors in managing the irrigation system, and presents a lucid and
thorough discussion on the performance of the irrigation bureaucracies.
It comprises two parts: the first outlines the factors affecting
irrigation performance under a wide range of topics in the first five
chapters. In Chapter One, the authors have attempted to assess the
performance of the irrigation bureaucracies, conceptualise irrigation
management issues, and build an empirical base for analysis while
drawing upon the experience of ten country cases in Asia, Africa, and
Latin America. The Second Chapter focuses on the variations in the
management structures identified and the types of irrigation systems;
and it defines the variables of the management structures.
The activities and objectives of irrigation management are
discussed in Chapter Three. The objectives include: greater production
and productivity of irrigation projects; improved water distribution;
reduction in conflicts; greater resource mobilisation and a sustained
system performance. The authors also highlight the performance criterion
in this chapter. They identify about six contextual factors which affect
the objectives and the performance of irrigation, which are discussed in
detail in Chapter Four. In Chapter Five, some organisational variables,
which would lead to improvements in irrigation, are examined.
The second part of the book deals with the strategies for improving
bureaucratic performance. Chapter Six discusses methods for improving
the management structure and style. The authors draw on the example of
the Command Water Management Project in Pakistan; and the Mahaweli
system management in Sri Lanka and Kenya. They also emphasise the need
for the internal reorganisation of irrigation agencies. Chapter Seven
suggests different approaches for agency reorientation. The authors
discuss about ten approaches but place the major emphasis on the
feed-back mechanism, interdependence, and water-users'
associations. Later in the chapter, they also discuss some normative
approaches such as value commitments, culture, peer dynamics, and career
paths. Chapter Eight presents the framework of the performance
variables, the greater emphasis being laid on institution building,
effectiveness, specificity, and competition.
Finally, the authors make observations on the purpose and context;
management vis-a-vis administration; internal structure; and leadership
and values. They also suggest measures to improve the performance of the
agencies concerned with managing irrigation as they take country
examples of the main irrigated continents and try to analyse
country-specific project interventions. One would tend to agree with the
authors that there is no specific answer and/or recipe for a particular
irrigation issue.
However, the authors have taken into consideration only the success
stories of some projects in the respective countries. For instance, they
discuss the Command Water Management Project (CWM) in the case of
Pakistan. The primary objective of this project was to increase
irrigated agricultural productivity in the country by exploring ways of
bringing about physical and institutional improvements within the
irrigation command areas. This objective was to be realised through
government capacity building, popular participation, water management
and, thus, increased agricultural production through improved management
of water and non-water inputs. A recent evaluation of the project
revealed that despite the design focus upon institutional development
and related goals, the majority of the project funds were utilised by
the civil irrigation bureaucracy. The completion of such civil works was
not the avowed objective of the project. The CWM has had little impact
on institutional development and sustainability of project efforts. This
requires foresight, operational vision, and objective clarity, which
perhaps are nonexistent in our irrigation bureaucracy. Pakistani
irrigation engineers are more administrators than managers and
goal-achievers.
The authors have also ignored the important aspect of inter-agency
coordination and interdependence. For example, historically, the public
sector management of Pakistan's irrigated agriculture has been
divided among a number of government agencies. The differences in
responsibility characterise the functions of the provincial irrigation
and agriculture departments, as well as other government agencies such
as the revenue and district administration. Similar separations occur
within the same line agency, the most important being between the
On-Farm Water Management (OFWM), Agriculture Engineering, and the
Agricultural Extension Service in the provincial Department of
Agriculture. The extension agent is not in communication with the water
management specialist and/or agriculture engineer, and has no link with
the irrigation engineer. All of them are not inter-acting at any time
with the farmer, who is the principal beneficiary of these services.
This separation has caused an inadequate integration among linked
components and the uncoordinated use of resources. This lack of
integration has caused a laxity in the management of water and non-water
inputs and has contributed, ultimately, to low agricultural
productivity.
A management model serves as a guideline for combining physical,
financial, and human resources. Over time, models of management may
become institutions and they may be widely accepted as a set of rules
and conventions for resource management. The OFWM project in Pakistan is
accepted as a management model, but not yet as an institution. However,
the traditional system of watercourse maintenance is an institution.
Similarly, the irrigation projects in Sri Lanka and elsewhere which are
mentioned in the book are management models. Thus, these new management
models are short-term indicators of progress; and the new institutions
are long-term indicators.
One may applaud the efforts of the authors in bringing together
irrigation management issues and highlighting the factors affecting the
productivity of irrigated agriculture. Irrigation managers and engineers
must read this book, as it will help mould their attitudes in addressing
management issues.
Zakir Hussain
USAID, Islamabad.