Thirsty for change: Water services in Nepal and users’ perceptions of the state

This brief examines how changes to local water management have impacted on access and users’ perceptions of the state

Abstract

This briefing examines how changes to local water management have impacted on access to water and users’ perceptions of the state. The findings emerge from the report ‘The drinking water service and users’ perceptions of the state in Rolpa, Nepal’. Central to the argument is that access to water is not the only issue: quality of service, the accountability of service providers, and people’s sense of ownership of the service are also important. To that end, the authors make 4 recommendations. The recent devastating earthquake makes these issues even more urgent. This briefing paper is the first in a series on basic services in Nepal.

Citation

Acharya, G.; Upreti, B.R.; Paudel, S.B.; Tandukar, A.; Harvey, P. Thirsty for change: Water services in Nepal and users perceptions of the state. SLRC Briefing Paper No. 14. Secure Livelihoods Research Consortium, Overseas Development Institute (ODI), London, UK (2015) 4 pp.

Thirsty for change: Water services in Nepal and users’ perceptions of the state. SLRC Briefing Paper No. 14

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2015