Implementing integrated river basin management in the Red River Basin, Vietnam: a solution looking for a problem?

cg.contributor.affiliationInternational Water Management Instituteen
cg.coverage.countryVietnam
cg.coverage.iso3166-alpha2VN
cg.coverage.regionSouth-eastern Asia
cg.creator.identifierFrançois Molle: 0000-0001-5748-8770
cg.creator.identifierChu Thai Hoanh: 0000-0003-0686-6385
cg.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.2166/wp.2011.012en
cg.issn1366-7017en
cg.issue4en
cg.journalWater Policyen
cg.river.basinREDen
cg.volume13en
dc.contributor.authorMolle, Francoisen
dc.contributor.authorHoanh, Chu Thaien
dc.date.accessioned2014-06-13T14:47:42Zen
dc.date.available2014-06-13T14:47:42Zen
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10568/40449
dc.titleImplementing integrated river basin management in the Red River Basin, Vietnam: a solution looking for a problem?en
dcterms.abstractSeveral water policy principles considered to be modern and internationally sanctioned have recently been adopted by Vietnam. This article focuses on the establishment of the Red River Basin Organization but expands its analysis to the wider transformations of the water sector that impinge on the formation and effectiveness of this organization. It shows that the promotion of integrated water resource management icons such as river basin organizations (RBOs) by donors has been quite disconnected from existing institutional frameworks. If policy reforms promoted by donors and development banks have triggered changes, these changes may have come not as a result of the reforms themselves but, rather, due to the institutional confusion they have created when confronted with the emergence of the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MoNRE). For the MoNRE, the river basin scale became crucial for grounding its legitimacy and asserting its role among the established layers of the administration, while for the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, RBOs became a focal point where power over financial resources and political power might potentially be relocated at its expense. Institutional change is shown to result from the interaction between endogenous processes and external pressures, in ways that are hard to predict.en
dcterms.accessRightsLimited Access
dcterms.available2011-04-23
dcterms.bibliographicCitationMolle, F.; Hoanh, Chu Thai. 2011. Implementing integrated river basin management in the Red River Basin, Vietnam: a solution looking for a problem? Water Policy, 13(4):518-534. doi: https://doi.org/10.2166/wp.2011.012en
dcterms.extentpp. 518-534en
dcterms.issued2011-08-01
dcterms.languageen
dcterms.publisherIWA Publishingen
dcterms.subjectwater managementen
dcterms.subjectriver basin managementen
dcterms.subjectorganizationsen
dcterms.subjectinstitutional reformen
dcterms.subjectgovernment departmentsen
dcterms.subjectwater policyen
dcterms.subjectpolitical aspectsen
dcterms.subjectenvironmental effectsen
dcterms.typeJournal Article

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