The privatization of water is a keenly contested issue in an
economically-liberalizing India. Since the 1990s, large social
groups across India's diverse and disparate peoples have been
re-negotiating their cultural relationships with each other as to
whether they support or oppose pro-privatization water policy
reforms. These claims and counter claims are seen as an impending
war over water resources, one that includes many different players
with many different agendas located across a wide variety of sites
whose actions and interactions shape policy production in
India.
This book is the first to assess the dynamics of water policy
processes in India. Using the case study of Delhi's water
situation, this book analyses emergent dynamics of policy process
in India in general and, more specifically, in the post-economic
reform era. Taking as its starting point a critique of linear
version of policy making, the author explains both how and why
particular types of knowledge, practices and values get established
in policy as well as the complex interplay of knowledge, power and
agency in water policy processes.
Water Policy Processes in India covers a critical gap in the
literature by analyzing how governments in practice make policies
that greatly affect the welfare of their people; the process
through which policies are developed and implemented; investigating
the aims and motives behind policies; and identifying the potential
areas of intervention in order to improve the policy process in
both its development and implementation stages.
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