In 2018, a few months before the first referendum for full sovereignty, the government of New Caledonia launched the co-design of the country's first water policy based on a broad consultation that involved 1 out of 600 New Caledonians, the locally so-called “Shared Water Policy”.
The book both presents and assesses the original and broad participatory process used to build the new water policy. It does so by crossing different points of view (government, local managers and customary authorities). The book is also devoted to bridging the gap between customary land studies and water policy. It seeks a way to weave water representations and customary water management practices into the new policy.
This experience in a unique decolonisation complex context will inspire policy makers, academics, managers working on participatory methodologies for more inclusive water policy and governance processes, especially in countries where indigenous populations and legal pluralism orders coexist.
Chapter 1. Introduction, Objectives, and Scope.- Part I. Setting up the context.- Chapter 2. Physical context and key water resource issues in New Caledonia.- Chapter 3. The balance between water resources and uses.- Chapter 4. Water quality: trends and challenges.- Chapter 5. Water law and legal pluralism in New Caledonia.- Part II. From water representations to water policy – A look insight customary lands.- Chapter 6. Water tensions and social transformations on customary lands.- Chapter 7. The Five Kanak Waters.- Chapter 8. Water places: from relational ontologies to water governance.- Chapter 9. Water quality on customary lands: An intimate link between humans and their environment.- Part III. The Shared Water Policy and its Implementation.- Chapter 10. From diagnosis to implementation of the Shared Water Policy.- Chapter 11. The VKP Water Management Committee: An inspiring and successful experience for water management and stakeholders’ engagement.- Chapter 12. A multi-level process for policy design and integrated planning.- Part IV. New Futures in Water Policy.- Chapter 13. Governmentality, multi-scales politics and the commons.- Chapter 14. Towards new forms of water governance to improve indigenous inclusion.
In 2018, a few months before the first referendum for full sovereignty, the government of New Caledonia launched the co-design of the country's first water policy based on a broad consultation that involved 1 out of 600 New Caledonians, the locally so-called “Shared Water Policy”.
The book both presents and assesses the original and broad participatory process used to build the new water policy. It does so by crossing different points of view (government, local managers and customary authorities). The book is also devoted to bridging the gap between customary land studies and water policy. It seeks a way to weave water representations and customary water management practices into the new policy.
This experience in a unique decolonisation complex context will inspire policy makers, academics, managers working on participatory methodologies for more inclusive water policy and governance processes, especially in countries where indigenous populations and legal pluralism orders coexist.
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Caroline Lejars is a researcher at CIRAD (International Cooperation Center for Agricultural Research for Development) and currently deputy director of a research unit on Water Management (UMR GEAU) in Montpellier. Her research focuses on the governance and management of hydrological territories mainly in North Africa and the Pacific. Most of her research is based on participatory approaches to support the organization of collective action. She has carried out and directed various research projects on groundwater governance, water contracts and arrangements and participatory planning for water policies. She was a lecturer at AgroParistech (2009–2010), associate professor at the National Agronomic Institute Hassan II in Morocco (2011–2016) and at the New Caledonian Agronomic Institute (2016–2019).
Séverine Bouard is a Human Geographer (PhD). Her research focuses on assessing the extent of agriculture and hunting/fishing among Indigenous Pacific livelihoods in the context of the commodification of nature and emerging Indigenous discourses on nature and places. She focuses on the trajectories of people and territories, highlighting social change at work. She has taken part in, or led, more than ten research programmes on natural resource management and has developed a research practice deeply rooted in fieldwork. Her aim is to understand and co-design public policies with stakeholders that are based on and respectful of indigenous ontologies and livelihood strategies. Together with Caroline Lejars, they led the research programme GOUTTE (Water on Governance on Customary Lands in New Caledonia), on which this edited volume is based. She will join the Department of Environmental Management at Lincoln University (NZ) in May 2025.