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Article

Social Hydrological Analysis for Poverty Reduction in Community-Managed Water Resources Systems in Cambodia

1
Stockholm Environment Institute, U.S. Center, 11 Curtis Avenue, Somerville, MA 02144-1224, USA
2
Merrimack River Watershed Council, 60 Island St #246, Lawrence, MA 01840, USA
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Independent Researcher, La Paz 2826, Bolivia
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Independent Researcher, Davis, CA 95616, USA
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Stockholm Environment Institute, Asia Center in Thailand, 10th Floor, Kasem Uttayanin Building, 254 Chulalongkorn University, Henri Dunant Road, Pathumwan, Bangkok 10330, Thailand
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The Asia Foundation, House No. 59 Oknha Peich (St 242), Phnom Penh 12101, Cambodia
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The Asia Foundation, 465 California St., 9th Floor, San Francisco, CA 94104-1804, USA
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Queen’s University, 9 University Ave, Kingston, ON K7L 3N6, Canada
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Water 2021, 13(13), 1848; https://doi.org/10.3390/w13131848
Submission received: 26 April 2021 / Revised: 3 June 2021 / Accepted: 25 June 2021 / Published: 2 July 2021
(This article belongs to the Section Water Resources Management, Policy and Governance)

Abstract

:
Achieving sustainable water resources management objectives can work in tandem with poverty reduction efforts. This study evidenced the strong social hydrological linkages that exist in Cambodia, which allowed for presenting a broader understanding of water resources challenges to better formulate and connect policies at the local and national levels. Models are often not developed with household- or community-level input, but rather with national- or coarse-level datasets. The method used in this study consisted of linking qualitative and quantitative social analysis with a previously developed technical water planning model. The results from the social inequalities analysis were examined for three water use types: domestic, rice production, and fishing in three parts of the watershed, namely, upstream, midstream, and downstream. Knowledge generated from the social analysis was used to refine previous water planning modeling. The model results indicate that without household data to consider social inequalities, the technical analysis for the Stung Chinit watershed was largely underrepresenting the shortages in irrigation supply seen by groups in the most downstream sections of the irrigation system. Without adding social considerations into the model, new policies or water infrastructure development suggested by the model could reinforce existing inequalities.

1. Introduction

Water resource challenges are difficult to define and solve because they are affected by the interlinkages of human and natural components [1]. Multiple human and natural linkages in relation to water can be highlighted. First, climate variability and its impacts on water supply availability [2]. Second, water demands for human consumption and productive uses, which are connected with the equitable access to and decision-making power over water resources [3]. Third, the sustainable management of those resources, and the ecological constraints of natural ecosystems [4,5]. Managing water resources to ensure both the production of rice and a healthy aquatic ecosystem for fishing are essential for supporting the livelihoods and poverty reduction efforts of local communities in many countries in Asia [6]. Addressing poverty and inequality in water resources planning needs to be part of decision-making processes in order to respond to context-specific poverty [7,8,9,10], socio-economic conditions [11,12,13], and development path challenges [14,15]. Ensuring sustainability needs to balance the adequate management of natural resources while preserving the socio-economic activities of the people living in the watershed [16]. Without having an accurate understanding of the social and environmental challenges, development policies could exacerbate existing inequalities and poverty [17]. Inclusive management of resources can contribute to higher sustainability and more equitable socio-economic (and social) outcomes for the people living in the watershed [18,19,20,21]. The ability of technical analyses to respond to social inequality depends on how effectively they can be interlinked [3,22,23,24,25]. This study examined the linkages between hydrologic and social components to inform water resources management for the Stung Chinit watershed in Cambodia.
The assessment of change and variability in water supplies has benefited from advances in scientific models that represent the hydrological system and estimate plausible ranges of future basin climate conditions [26,27,28]. These climate conditions can be combined with expected changes in demands related to human activities and desired development paths, e.g., increase in agricultural production, expected population growth, and higher food demands for fishing activities [29]. Arriving at a selection of optimal water management options for sustainable future outcomes under deep uncertainty is often based on environmental parameters to define resilience and ecologically desired thresholds [30,31]. In comparing the outcomes from such thresholds, sustainability- and resilience-focused actions are based on physical and natural metrics without considering the effects on livelihood and socio-economic activity [32,33,34]. Analysis of complex environmental systems dynamics needs to be coupled with an assessment of the degree to which implementing such environmental thresholds would inhibit people’s well-being in addition to the ecosystem services these systems provide.
While the consideration of economic and budgetary aspects has a long history in water resources analysis, the integration of sociopolitical factors into hydrologic modeling is much more novel [35,36,37]. In natural resources analysis more generally, social and power considerations have been incorporated into mathematical models through socio-ecological systems (SES) modeling, while, more recently, socio-hydrology has attempted to integrate human social responses into hydrological systems modeling specifically [38,39]. Even so, researchers often incorporate social factors during the results analysis and policy formation phases, rather than use social science research, particularly surrounding poverty and gender, to inform the model formulation process [40,41]. Recent efforts in stakeholder-driven participatory planning have proposed robust decision support (RDS), which adopts the analytical framework of robust decision making (RDM) [26], but it is embedded within a broadly subscribed participatory process to drive problem formulation, model definition, and alternative development [27]. By combining these processes and tools, a numerical hydrologic model can be constructed with the incorporation of local knowledge; however, it often fails to understand and incorporate the realities of poverty, gender, and social status.
In transitional economies [14], people’s livelihoods are inextricably linked to natural resources, from access to safe drinking water in their homes to access to water for productive activities and fishing. Shifting hydrological conditions due to climate change, varying water-related challenges based on the location relative to water supply infrastructure in the watershed, increasing demands from socio-economic development activities, different gender roles and livelihoods in relation to natural resources, and growing environmental constraints add to this complexity [42,43,44,45,46]. In developing economies, poverty reduction efforts can be an important influence in places where productive activities and income depend on natural resources. In the case of Cambodia, rice production and fishing, which are heavily dependent on water resources, are the key sources of income and food security. Strategies that ensure water security have the potential to support poverty reduction and gender equality efforts; however, they can also aggravate existing inequalities or exclusionary water practices if such social considerations are not identified as part of the modeling process.
Efforts to reduce inequality from the governance and management around ecosystems must address the complexity and interdependency of the system components and the connections with the social context and factors inhibiting access to resources [25]. Ecosystem services marginality occurs when social groups are at the margins of ecological sustainability conditions [47]. This marginality or water access exclusion occurs when a group of people is located at the margins of social and ecological conditions that prevent them from accessing and utilizing natural resources [47]. These types of marginalizing conditions include location-based inequalities and environmental constraints that contribute to poverty.
Poverty indicators that demonstrate the influence and connection between water resources and poverty can help identify environmental and social conditions that contribute to the reduction of poverty and social inequalities. These findings on the environmental and social conditions can inform numerical hydrological models and RDS-based analytical frameworks. In 2018, the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative [48] developed a global poverty index that considers many overlapping deprivations experienced by the poor. Access to safe and reliable water is one of the deprivations related to poverty. Multidimensional poverty analysis, such as the multidimensional poverty analysis (MDPA) framework [49] are useful tools for understanding the socio-economic realities within a watershed and allow for the adaptation of the analysis to these realities. Standard indices for monetary-based poverty indicators should not be the only way of measuring poverty, but they can add another wealth-related layer to the analysis. The wealth index is often used to rank households based on their assets. Addressing poverty and inequality in the access of resources can support decisions that link the biophysical components and the social components to ensure sustainability and secure people’s livelihoods.
This paper describes the results from the incorporation of poverty and social inequality aspects into technical projects to establish that water security actions can also support the wellbeing of households in community-managed systems. A series of steps are suggested in which a qualitative analysis informs quantitative analytical tools. First, a literature review and key informant interviews informed the development of a survey. Results from the survey were then used to create actionable indicators and refine a water planning software application, namely, the Water Evaluation and Planning (WEAP) [50] software that was previously developed for the Stung Chinit watershed [29]. Using the insights gained from the qualitative analyses and the WEAP tool, we explored three main questions: 1. How are water availability and water access related? 2. What inequities and experiences are revealed with finer-scale survey information that can inform water resource planning? 3. What insights are provided when poverty and gender are used to contextualize and inform water systems modeling formulations? This study shows how scientifically informed water management actions can ensure water security while also contributing to the reduction of location-based poverty induced by marginal ecological conditions.

2. Materials and Methods

Addressing social inequalities and poverty needs to include an understanding of the social context and the forces that affect them. The materials employed in this analysis include the output of a previous project that used the technical model [29] and the MDPA framework. The novelty in the analysis presented in this study corresponded to linking qualitative and quantitative frameworks from a diverse set of disciplines and multiple research teams to address poverty and inequality in connection to watershed-level planning. The Stung Chinit watershed was the case study used. The previous project was focused on water security in the Stung Chinit watershed using the WEAP software [29].
The methodology used in this study can be summarized in three steps (Figure 1). Step 1 involved a description of the case study and an understanding of the social context of poverty and inequality through a qualitative analysis based on a literature review and key informant interviews guided by the MDPA framework. Step 2 involved the development and implementation of a survey informed by step 1 to generate social indicators. Step 3 involved reformulation of the technical analysis in the hydrological WEAP model [29] to incorporate key messages from the social indicators from step 2. These three steps allowed for an integrated analysis of the social and environmental challenges by refining the technical analysis in WEAP to evaluate and compare with results from the previous study. This section of the document starts with a description of the case study, followed by a section on each of the methodological steps mentioned above.

2.1. Stung Chinit Case Study

The Chinit River (Stung Chinit) is an important source of life for the people and aquatic species that live within its 8236 km2 watershed (Figure 2). The residents rely heavily on the river to support rice farming and fishing as two main sources of food and livelihood [51,52]. Approximately 70% of the labor force in Cambodia is employed in agriculture [52], with that number being even greater in rural regions, such as the Stung Chinit basin, where approximately 90% of cropland is rice [53]. Agricultural expansion by expanding cultivated areas and maximizing yields continues to be an important goal for Cambodia, which is promoted by the government and the Asian Development Bank [54,55]. Rice cultivation, specifically, is a major consideration in the national food security effort [56,57].
Being a major tributary of the Tonle Sap Lake, the largest and most important lake in Cambodia both in terms of the economy and water supply, the Stung Chinit supports one of the world’s most productive ecosystems and fishing economies [58]. While the river is an essential resource, heavy reliance on the Stung Chinit River and Tonle Sap floodplain also poses risks to both rice production and fisheries, and those who rely on them. Rice farmers struggle with limited development and low yields [53], while fisheries of the Tonle Sap are negatively affected by large-scale global changes, such as hydropower development, climate change, and urban migration [59].
The government of Cambodia has invested in the construction of many large-scale irrigation schemes in the upper part of Tonle Sap basin, and have granted concessions to private agribusinesses in the flood plains to promote rapid agriculture development and to fulfill the country’s ambition of becoming one of the leading rice exporters [60]. National policies on economic development driven by rice exports affect local communities’ access to water and aquatic resources. Such investment benefits private agri-investors, while many local communities have lost their traditional livelihood resources, such as wetlands for floating rice and grazing grounds for cattle [60]). These impacts and other challenges are not felt the same in all parts of the watershed. Most of the rice is rainfed, although there are two major irrigation schemes and a few small schemes that provide irrigation to improve yields and planting. However, these supply water to a small area (<186 km2) relative to the area of the watershed [29], disproportionately improving farming practices for some populations over others. Without management and coordination, these resources may cease to provide the functions necessary to sustain the populations that rely on them.
Upstream parts of the Stung Chinit watershed are affected by changes in forest cover, which affects downstream water availability for agricultural practices and other uses. Land-use management practices in the watershed can have both positive and negative impacts on water quantity (downstream water availability, groundwater recharge, runoff), and water quality (soil erosion, sedimentation, pollution), which in turn influence the ecological dynamics that support fisheries and agriculture. Discrepancies in the management of ecosystem services and policy interventions between the different parts of the watershed can leave people at the margins of unfavorable ecological conditions [61,62,63].
People in the Stung Chinit watershed depend on water for their socio-economic activities and the characteristics of the hydrological process and seasonality in the Stung Chinit impact people’s social processes around rice cycles and fishing. A lack of access to water in this region can greatly deteriorate people’s wellbeing [62].

2.2. Qualitative Analysis on Poverty and Inequality Context

The first step of the methodology is guided by multidimensional poverty analysis (MDPA) [49], starting with a literature review of the four poverty dimensions central to MDPA: resources, opportunities and choice, power and voice, and human security. The research design that guided the qualitative components of the analyses is included Table S1. The literature review is organized based on the search of keywords related to poverty dimensions, gender, and water-related management aspects. Relevant articles and papers were selected by experts from each of these fields of research based on their professional judgment. A total of 64 documents in English were reviewed; 52% were from peer-reviewed articles and 48% from the grey literature. Key aspects considered in the literature review correspond to the MDPA components shown in Figure 3.
The literature review provides the input for the key informants’ interviews (KIIs) at the national and local levels containing questions regarding each of the four dimensions (Supplementary Material Document S2). To choose the key informants for the interviews, a map of actors was developed pertaining to different sectors at the local, provincial, and national levels (Table 1).

2.3. Survey Development and Implementation

The information from the literature review and KIIs provided the input for a household survey to approximately 800 households, which were equivalent to about 1% of the total 110,668 households living in the Stung Chinit watershed (Supplementary Material Document S3). To have a good representation of the watershed and sex-disaggregated data, the survey was distributed in three locations: upstream, midstream, and downstream. The survey design was based on the key informants’ interviews to assess the pervasiveness of the aspects identified in the KIIs. Questions to estimate the wealth index were included, as well as questions to fill data gaps in the WEAP model development from the previous project.
The sample of 800 was split equally across three regions along the Stung Chinit River watershed, namely, the upper watershed, middle watershed, and lower watershed, to have a representative sample to compare between regions. At the overall watershed level, survey statistics indicated a margin of error of about ±3.5%. The number of surveys for each region was 270, with a margin of error of about ±6% for each region. For the watershed level analysis, data weights (upstream 0.098, midstream 1.59, downstream 1.30) were used to factor in population differences when we combined the data for all three regions. This ensured that each region contributed to the overall results and analysis as per its relative population. Table 2 shows the total number of households surveyed in each area of the watershed.
The sample distribution within each region consisted of selecting 15 villages with 18 households in each village to obtain a sample size of 270 households. A total of 45 villages were surveyed across the three regions. To have a distribution of villages with varied population sizes, we divided the entire set of villages from a region into three groups based on their population: high population, medium population, and low population. From each of these three groups, we randomly selected five villages from those of each village population size to ensure that villages of all population sizes are reflected in the sample. Table 3 shows the total number of sample villages and sample households per village.
In selecting who within each household to survey, a survey protocol was established. All individuals surveyed had some decision-making power within the household and within each village, nine individuals were men and nine were women. Based on the survey, indicators were designed considering each of the four MDPA poverty dimensions (Table 4). Indicators were estimated by considering the relative frequency of the answers for each question used to design each indicator. Levels or categories for each indicator were mainly established based on the Sustainable Development Goals’ (SDGs) monitoring indicators and literature about poverty and gender. Considering that some variables had missing data, it is important to mention that each indicator was approximated with a different number of observations.

2.3.1. Wealth Index

The wealth index calculation is based on the DHS Wealth Index Construction [64]. The estimation of the wealth index for the Stung Chinit Watershed was also differentiated by upstream, midstream, and downstream location. By using the principal components analysis procedure, the wealth index places individual households on a continuous scale of relative wealth. Households are then separated into five wealth index quintiles to compare the influence of wealth on various indicators. To estimate the wealth index, variables adapted to the Stung Chinit watershed (Table 5) related to each household’s ownership of selected assets and materials for housing construction were used. The wealth index is a useful tool when income and expenditures data are not available, and to identify differences between socio-economic groups. By estimating the wealth index and the quintile distribution, differences between the poorest and wealthiest households can be analyzed.

2.3.2. Gender Analysis from Survey

The gender analysis focused on three domains of water use: domestic water supply, agriculture/irrigation, and fishing. Gendered differences and patterns related to aspects of access and power across all domains were analyzed. Access was assessed based on the availability and sufficiency of different water options for households within the domain. Power, on the other hand, was assessed based on participation in discussions and decision-making at the household level and at the community/public level on the subject. Gender differences were examined via two parameters: gender of the survey respondent and gender of the household leadership figure. Specifically, we disaggregated data by gender of the respondents to examine perception, and by gender of the household leadership to examine power and influence in decision making at the household and community levels. In the analysis, the household head was determined through a combination of two survey questions that asked the respondents to identify the name and gender of the key decision makers in their families, thus classifying them as male-headed households or female-headed households. Qualitative information from the literature and the KIIs was also used to contextualize the quantitative findings.

2.4. Quantitative Analysis on WEAP

Model and Scenario Reformulation

The Water Evaluation and Planning (WEAP) software was used to represent the hydrology and water management within the Stung Chinit watershed. The initial WEAP model is described in [29], where it represents 12 catchments with varying land cover and 8 irrigation groups (Figure 4) that were given equal priority in the water management system. This meant that when insufficient water was available to meet the demand of all groups, all groups received the same shortage (as a percent of demand). Hydrology in the catchments was calculated using the WEAP soil moisture method, while irrigation demands in the irrigation groups were calculated using WEAP’s MABIA method [65]. The MABIA method includes detailed information on crop scheduling, irrigation practices, and irrigation demand calculations based on the Food and Agriculture Organizations Drainage Paper [66]. It contains a daily simulation of transpiration, evaporation, irrigation requirements, irrigation scheduling, and crop growth and yields, and includes modules for estimating reference evapotranspiration and soil water capacity. Inputs for both methods include climate (rainfall, temperature, relative humidity, wind speed, and cloud coverage), irrigation schemes, soil information, land-use types, and crop characteristics. Future scenarios are developed for both the changing climate and increased crop production.
This previous model used all information available at the time it was developed to assess water availability in the Stung Chinit watershed for rice production and the ecosystem habitat. It assessed the potential impacts that climate change and water management practices may have on that availability. The demands were originally represented with equal priorities for all irrigation groups because insufficient information was available to support a different assumption. Additionally, the model failed to assess water access as it assumed that if water was available, it could be accessed by farmers due to a lack of more refined information to inform an improved assumption. While water may have been physically available, the infrastructural, social, economic, and other barriers may inhibit one’s ability to access and use that water to improve their livelihoods. The current model was refined based on findings from the survey to fill the knowledge gap regarding actual water access among the irrigation groups and actual rice planting patterns among farmers within these groups. Incorporation of this information and improvement of model assumptions allowed for the analysis to better reveal, demonstrate, and assess water availability and access among these groups under varying scenarios. Because these modifications were reliant on the survey results, they are described in detail in Section 3.3.
This analysis explores a modification of these scenarios based on the new information provided by the survey results. The aim of these new scenarios was to assess more realistic cropping patterns based on new knowledge and an understanding of how changes to water access representation as described in the previous section impacted the modeling results. The six modified scenarios assessed in this analysis are shown in Table 6 and were made up of combinations of three variables: the rice crop schedule, prioritizing different demands, and irrigation access. Each of these variables is described in more detail below.

3. Results

The results are presented in three subsections: (1) summary of the literature and the interviews, (2) survey indicators of multidimensional poverty in connection to water resources and a wealth index analysis, and (3) WEAP model changes and results.

3.1. Summary of Literature Review and Key Informant Interviews

The literature review and KIIs highlighted the challenges in social hydrology research in water resources management at the watershed level. Some of the findings from the literature review was included in the introduction of this paper. The sections below summarize the key challenges identified: (i) the integration and coordination of decisions across scales in watershed governance; (ii) creating the capacity and agency of local-level institutions, and (iii) location-based inequality in water access within the boundaries of a watershed. A section on gender inequality aspects was also included.

3.1.1. Lack of Integration of Policies across Scales Could Increase Inequalities

Cambodia’s economic development policies, which are premised on commercialized agriculture and privatized natural resources, have affected access to water resources and reshaped the livelihood options of local communities, particularly of the poor and women. For example, water concessions to large-scale and private commercial fisheries deprive local communities, particularly poor subsistent and women fishers, from accessing their traditional fishing grounds [52,67]. To fulfill the country’s ambition of becoming one of the leading rice exporters, the Cambodian government has invested in the construction of many large-scale irrigation schemes in the upper part of Tonle Sap basin and granted land concessions to private agribusinesses in the flood plains. This benefits private agri-investors, while many local communities have lost their traditional livelihood resources, such as wetlands for floating rice and grazing grounds for cattle [52]. Furthermore, the benefits of irrigation schemes are not distributed evenly among farmers. For instance, the schemes in the Stung Chinit watershed serve small areas in the basin (Figure 4, left). Commercialized agriculture and the privatization of natural resources in indigenous ethnic groups have eroded the traditional equitable decision-making systems and control over resources, labor exchange practices, and social solidarity that have been critical resources for women and the poor [68,69].

3.1.2. Competing Uses of Water Resources for Energy, Agriculture, and Fishery Compromise Local Food Security and Entrench Inequality

Cambodia aspires to export electricity from hydropower [20]. The upstream construction of large-scale hydropower dams on the Mekong River and its tributaries has caused negative effects on the ecosystems and livelihoods of communities living on the Tonle Sap, potentially fueling further conflicts over water and aquatic resources [52,70]. Furthermore, impacts and benefits of hydropower development are not distributed equally [20,21,67]. For example, urban populations have higher access to electricity (97%) compared to rural populations (68%) [20] and rural communities typically experience the brunt of impacts of hydropower development, as dams are typically located in rural areas. At the same time, they cannot afford the cost of electricity produced by the hydropower that has taken away their resources [21,71]. The construction of the Stung Chinit reservoir for irrigation has caused declines in fish resources that negatively affect fishing communities downstream, and the reservoir is not operated to regulate water during dry or rainy seasons, which could lead to intensified flooding [72].

3.1.3. Relative Location in the Watershed and Irrigation Schemes Can Exacerbate Inequalities

Discrepancies in water management between upstream and downstream parts of the watershed can lead to location-based social inequalities and poverty [62,63]. For example, upstream farmers use groundwater for farming and their domestic activities (in Sandan district). Midstream and downstream farmers have more access to surface water and fishing is observed mainly in the midstream (Santuk district) and downstream (Baray district) [73]. Flooding mostly affects people downstream, most severely with flash floods [61]. Proximity to canals determines access to water for those whose fields are located within an irrigation scheme. However, the water does not reliably reach those farms that are farther from the main canals and downstream along the canal from other farms [29]. Access also depends on capital. Farmers who have the financial means to pay for pumps can get groundwater for their farms, can pump water from the canals to their fields, or can build their own storage to reserve water for when is needed [17].

3.1.4. Inclusive Participation and Institutional Coordination Can Contribute to Sustainable Management

Decentralized water management needs to be reinforced with capacity building, participation, and coordination. The construction of canals and the creation of Farmer’s Water User Communities (FWUCs) improved farmer’s livelihoods for some, but not for all. Rice farmers with access to irrigation canals improved their livelihoods by planting rice earlier, more reliably, and in the dry season [72]. Farmers are organized around FWUCs, which are responsible for maintaining the canal systems located within their jurisdictions and for communicating with farmers, local leaders, and the Provincial Department of Water Resources and Meteorology (PDoWRAM) to ensure that farmers have access to water from the reservoirs when they need it. The management of reservoirs and canals provides fish with a habitat, which increases fish productivity [74]; however, the FWUCs serve a small area in the watershed and provide benefits only to those located closer to the canals, who have access to information about when water shortages occur. While proximity to canals can create inequality of water access, cooperation between upstream and downstream users could remedy location-based inequality. Instead, the lack of coordination causes shortages for users located at the end of the canals [61,62,63,68,75].

3.1.5. Lack of Inclusion Efforts in Institutionalized Water Management Further Disadvantages Women

Cultural expectations for Khmer women, the main ethnic group in Cambodia, are to be gentle, obedient, and caring. This limits their active participation in the public domain [76,77]. Female household heads, who account for 20% of rural households, face more challenges in dealing with male-dominated authorities [78] and in accessing irrigation water [79]. While national economic policies on commercialized agricultural and privatized natural resources, coupled with the competing use of water resources, have increased social and gender inequality between and within regions, the decentralization in resource management, such as community fisheries management systems, and FWUCs has not changed the unequal power relations between women and men. For example, fisherwomen are further excluded in fish management committees because they are not considered principal fishers and their contribution/role is undervalued [19]. Similarly, the FWUCs are mostly run by men [74]—there are 12 FWUCs in the region and only one FWUC has a female lead. Furthermore, women have been instrumentalized in the discourse of decentralizing natural resource management. Even though women have increasingly been involved in traditionally male-dominated domains, such as the maintenance of water and sanitation facilities and community fisheries management due to increasing pressure from donor agencies [80,81], the insertion of women into such community-based institutions without dealing with social relationships and practices that determine unequal resource allocation has increased women’s workload and does not benefit nor empower them.

3.2. Survey Indicators and Wealth Index

Data for the construction of indicators were obtained from the poverty, gender, and water household survey conducted at the Stung Chinit watershed during October 2019. The survey collected information from 812 households living in the watershed. The analysis was structured around the poverty MDPA dimensions for each water-use sector: drinking and domestic, rice production, fishing, and livestock. The indicators were estimated by considering the relative frequency of the answers for each question and for households located at each section of the watershed: upstream, midstream, and downstream. Table 4 includes the list of indicators used for each dimension and each water use sector.
The values of the indicators listed in Table 4 are shown in Figure 5 below. The graphic uses petal-shaped graphical objects to represent each of the MDPA dimensions as it is indicated in the top menu and corresponds to the description of the indicators in Table 4. The values of the indicators range from 0 (least desired value) to 1 (most desired value). The sizes of the petals correspond to the value of the indicator; smaller values are closer to 0 and larger values are closer to 1. The colors of the petals relate to the values of the wealth index differences between the “richest” quintile and the “poorest” quintile. The MDPA petals are organized in columns for each sector: domestic, rice, fishing, and livestock. Each row corresponds to the location of the households in the watershed: upstream, midstream, and downstream. The sections below include a description of the indicator analysis for each sector and location.

3.2.1. Drinking and Domestic

The results indicate that all parts of the watershed had access to some source of water; however, not all households had safe drinking water on their premises, which means that they needed to collect it. The indicator for households collecting water (O1) indicates the proportion of households who did not spend time collecting water or spent less than 30 min. The value of this indicator for the upstream part of the watershed was 0.22, meaning that 78% of the households spent more than 30 min collecting water, and that value was even lower for the poorest percentile (Figure 5). The values for this indicator of water collection time for midstream and downstream parts were 0.68 and 0.67, respectively, meaning that close to 70% of the households spent no time or less than 30 min.
Further analysis on water collection time was done to determine the individuals collecting the water in terms of gender and the specific locations of the household within the watershed (Figure 5). As indicated by O1, those in the upstream part of the watershed spent more time collecting water than elsewhere (also shown in Figure 6). Further analysis on who collected the water (Figure 7) indicates that, contrary to suggestions by key informant interviews and the literature, women were not the dominant group collecting water, and neither were children. This is an interesting finding that needs more examination.

3.2.2. Rice Production

Water availability for irrigation (R2) shows the percentage of those who had enough water among the households that irrigated rice. The downstream areas had the lowest values for R2 with 0.53, followed by the upstream part with 0.70 and then the midstream with 0.81. While values for rice irrigation availability was 0.70 upstream, indicators for available water for subsistence (O2) was 0.31. The greatest differences in the wealth index for most of the indicators for rice production were found upstream. In particular, indicators that related to having access to an FWUC (P2) showed a low percentage of households across the watershed, in particular in the mid and upstream portions (0.09 and 0.11, respectively). Furthermore, most households in the upstream region reported suffering from natural disasters that affected their agriculture in the last twelve months (H2).

3.2.3. Fishing and Livestock

Fishing, similar to rice, is a key socio-economic activity. Indicator O3 estimated that between 25 to 30% of the households depended on fishing. Out of these households, R3 estimated the percentage for which fish was caught for food provision only. This value was greater downstream (0.32), followed by midstream (0.26) and upstream (0.07), which emphasized the importance of fishing in people’s diets and food security. Survey indicators for livestock access and use show that in all parts of the watershed, households depended on livestock and had enough water to support those activities.

3.2.4. Gender Data Disaggregation for Gender Analysis

Across the three domains of water use that the gender analysis focused on (i.e., domestic water supply, agriculture/irrigation, and fishing), the data indicate that male household heads had more decision-making power across all domains. However, participation in decision making at the community level was low across the areas. In terms of the domestic water supply, the key aspect of decision making was about investment in water supply infrastructure, as over half of the surveyed households reported making time and financial investment in improving their domestic water supply, with no significant difference between male-headed households and female-headed households. Thus, while male household heads dominated decision making regarding domestic water supply at the household level, the data show that decisions were often made in consultation with female partners of the household head and other female and male adults in the family. At the community level, there were few public meetings on issues around domestic water, which may have been because most domestic water sources were individual household investments (such as wells). Within irrigation and agriculture, women are particularly underrepresented in decision-making bodies, such as FWUCs. Furthermore, there was a gap in access to information regarding water supply between male and female household members. This was particularly evident in terms of irrigation water, where not only half of the FWUC participants reported not knowing the FWUC’s irrigation scheduling and fees, but men were also reported to be the primary recipients of the information. With regard to fishing, there were significantly more female-headed households that reported catching fish for food supply as compared to male-headed households, which tended to also sell their fish. This may suggest that female-headed houses tended to retain less surplus to sell for income. In relation to this, female-headed households also experienced worse subsistence impacts due to the reduction in fish resources than male-headed households, with the data indicating more female-headed households are not getting enough fish for food, in contrast with male-headed households.

3.3. WEAP Model Refinements and Results

The survey results were used to refine the model and analysis developed in [29], specifically the representation of rice planting and irrigation. This section shows the survey results that informed the refinement of the model, as well as the results for the refined model.

3.3.1. Refinement of Irrigation Water Access

The survey results regarding water access for irrigation were used to improve the representation of rice irrigation practices in the model by reflecting existing inequalities on the ground. Because the model focused on the irrigation system supported by the Stung Chinit and Krasaing reservoirs [29], only survey responses from households that used that system or were nearby to that system and therefore might have had the potential to use it were used to improve the model’s representation. The household selection was influenced by the results of two survey questions: “Do you use irrigation canals in the dry season?” and “Does an FWUC exist in your community?” as well as geographical information. Figure 8 shows the spatial representation of these responses and a 15 km buffer from the existing canal system. All households within the 15 km buffer were included and assigned to the nearest irrigation group (Figure 8, right). This buffer was selected based on three factors: (1) Households may not be located directly adjacent to the household’s fields; therefore 15 km was a reasonable distance to assume that someone may travel to their fields. (2) This buffer captured most houses that stated they used irrigation canals in the dry season (Figure 8, left). Households farther than 15 km from the canal system did state that they used canals for irrigation in the dry season, but it was assumed that the households in the lowest part of the watershed used canals directly off the river outside the canal system under study (Figure 8, left). (3) This buffer captured most houses that stated an FWUC exists in their community (Figure 8, center). Some households outside of the 15 km buffer indicated that FWUCs did exist in their village or community, but similarly, due to the clustered pattern of the responses, it was assumed that those outside of the buffer were referring to FWUCs that operated different systems than the one being studied (Figure 8, center).
Despite previous findings from the literature and KIIs, the gender of the household head did not appear to play a large role in the access to different source types (Figure 9); therefore, the model was not refined to consider the gender of household head in regard to irrigation water access. However, survey results show that location largely determined the irrigation access: for those households that did use canals and were located within the 15 km buffer, the farther the household was from the reservoirs (groups 6 and 8, Figure 10), the less likely they were to have enough water (Figure 10). Across the year, households closest to groups 6 and 8 reported having shortages in irrigation water in most months of the year, while the other groups reported shortages in fewer months or not at all (Figure 10). Most households who irrigated in closest proximity to group 8 experienced irrigation issues, along with a wide variety and combination of issues (Figure 11). Few households who used canals closest to groups 1 and 5 experienced issues (Figure 10 and Figure 11).
Prior to the survey analysis, it was assumed that all irrigation groups received water equitably because better information was not available to support another assumption. However, inequity in water access between the groups was evident in the survey analysis. To reflect this new understanding, the model was modified so that when there were shortages, groups 3 and 7 could take water first because they were farther upstream, then water was given to groups 1, 2, and 5 equally (these groups were closest to the reservoir system; based on field visits to group 2, it was assumed to operate well and therefore farmers were likely to have sufficient water), then to group 4, then group 6, then lastly, group 8 (see Figure 4 for the location of the groups). All other rules regarding irrigation in the model remained as described in [29].

3.3.2. Refinement of Rice Cropping and Modeled Scenarios

The analysis presented in [29] shows the trade-offs between supplying water for rice expansion and maintaining river flows for fish. This previous work explored scenarios that combined considerations of climate change, different rice crop schedules, increasing irrigated area, and prioritizing different demands for downstream flow requirements [29], Table 6.
While it was known that farmers may grow rice once, twice, three, or four times per year, prior to the survey analysis, it was not well understood what proportion of farmers practiced these various crop schedules. Therefore, in the baseline scenario of [29], all groups grew rice once per year, and in all subsequent scenarios regarding increasing crop schedules, the increases in plantings were applied uniformly across all groups (all groups grew twice per year, all grew three times per year, etc.). Figure 12 shows the percentages of households closest to each group (using the same subset of households as described in the previous section) that used canals for irrigation and grew rice once, twice, and three times per year, as found through the survey results. Across all groups, most households were growing rice twice per year, group 5 had the greatest proportion of households growing rice three times per year, and group 8 had the greatest proportion of households growing rice once per year (Figure 12). No households reported growing rice four times per year. To make this set of scenarios more realistic, these percentages were applied to the area of groups in the model to areas that grew rice once, twice, and three times per year in the baseline scenario. For groups that were not represented by the survey, these assumptions were made: all areas in groups 7 and 3 only planted once per year, group 2 was equal to the distribution for group 1, and group 4 was equal to the distribution of group 6.
An increased rice crop schedule was considered in these scenarios based on the improved understanding of current practices (Figure 12) and the new understanding that groups upstream and closest to the reservoirs had more reliable irrigation access than groups farther from the reservoirs (as described in the previous section). In this crop pattern, the entire area of only groups 1, 2, and 5 grew rice three times per year, and the distribution of rice cropping within the other groups remained as shown in Figure 12 (S2, S3, S5, and S6; Table 6).
The consideration for prioritizing different demands remained the same in these scenarios as in the previous work, where some scenarios included no flow requirement and irrigation demands were prioritized (S1, S2, S4, and S5; Table 6) and ones where a streamflow requirement of the 95th percentile flow (Q95) for each month of the year was prioritized downstream (S3 and S6; Table 6).
All scenarios in this analysis were simulated with the historical climate repeated over years 2019–2047.

3.3.3. WEAP Model Output Comparison

A major goal in this analysis was to investigate the differences in model results when all irrigation groups’ accessed water equally (an assumption based on information without social factors gathered from the household survey) and when the inequity that was seen in the household survey was reflected in the model construction, and therefore, how water management decisions could be misled by modeling results that neglected social factors. The results show that the incorporation of social factors into the hydrological model led to different results for irrigation coverage by irrigation group. Figure 13 shows violin graphs to represent the average annual percent irrigation coverage for the irrigation groups under each scenario and water year type. The violin graphics were structured in three columns according to the year type—dry, average, and wet—and in two rows. The first row corresponded to the scenarios without the incorporation of the poverty analysis (S1 to S3 based on Table 6). The second row shows the results with the incorporation of the poverty analysis (S4 to S6 from Table 6). In dry and average years, the difference between the two sets of scenarios was particularly apparent. Specifically, the high priority groups (3 and 7), followed by the next priority groups (1, 2, and 5), experienced much higher coverage than the lowest priority groups (4, 6, and 8) in dry and average years when these considerations were incorporated (“poverty and gender = true”). In the first row (S1, S2, S3), the differences in coverage between the irrigation groups were much less pronounced, producing violin plots that were denser and where the high priority groups from the other scenarios (S4, S5, S6) experienced more shortages. However, the differences between coverage in the original hydrologic model and the model modified with social factors were much less pronounced for wet years. Notably, the second priority group (1, 2, 5) did relatively well with respect to the lowest priority group (4, 6, 8) in the irrigation expansion without flow requirement scenario (S5) during dry years, whereas those irrigation groups performed much more closely to the lowest priority groups for the baseline (S4) and irrigation expansion with flow requirement (S6) in dry years. Of all the scenarios tested, the irrigation expansion with flow requirement scenario (S6) seemed to have the largest change in coverage behavior for all irrigation groups when considering social factors as opposed to the coverage results for the model that did not consider social factors in both dry and average year-types.

4. Discussion

The scale in which policies were developed and implemented was mismatched from the challenges of the people and ecosystems that are affected. National-level decisions aimed at improving macroeconomic indicators exacerbated poverty at local levels. Poverty realities were affected by the relative location of communities within a watershed, which emphasized the need for inclusive participation and joint consultation at the local level and coordination between people within a watershed and with the national government. Aspects of the decision scale, relative location, and coordination created inequalities in water access for domestic use, rice production, and fish conservation in the Stung Chinit watershed.
Results on drinking and domestic water use indicate that communities in the upstream part of the watershed had limited access to water in their homes, had food shortages, and spent a significant amount of time collecting water. The upper watershed should be targeted for interventions to provide safe access to domestic water supplies that result in making this time available for other purposes. Gender analysis of the survey data shows that the gender of the household head was also a variable that was linked to water access and water sources. For example, across the locations, the numbers of male-headed households experiencing water shortages were higher than those of female-headed households.
The information gap between genders suggests that while entities such as FWUCs expected farmers to be aware of information on irrigation and bear the responsibility to farm accordingly, there was limited consideration on how that information may not be equally accessible by male and female irrigators.
Overall, there are key aspects of the survey that could be clarified through qualitative methods to bolster the assessment of gender aspects of water-related access. Additionally, quantitative data are limited in capturing the dynamics of decision making (e.g., how decision making is negotiated at the household and community level). Thus, data on decision making can be further substantiated with qualitative methods to better understand how personal experiences and household dynamics can provide a more holistic picture to the survey data.
Climate change adaptation strategies for rice production, as well as water management actions, are needed upstream where most of the households suffered from natural disasters on agriculture in the last twelve months and there was low participation in local water management, i.e., the FWUCs. The other parts of the watershed would also benefit from more participation in the FWUCs and strategies to prevent and mitigate natural disasters affecting rice production.
Models are often not developed with household or community level input, but rather with national-level or coarse-level datasets. It is evident that without the poverty and gender survey considerations, the Stung Chinit model was largely underrepresenting shortages in the irrigation supply seen by groups farthest from the irrigation system. The previous study suggested that there was sufficient water in the modeled irrigation system to expand the irrigated area by 10%, grow rice twice per year, and protect downstream flows under climate change [3]. However, this study shows that while this water may be available, it was not necessarily accessible to all. Without adding this aspect of reality into the model, new irrigation systems, changes to existing systems, or other policies or infrastructure that may be assessed in the model would not accurately represent those who benefit and those who do not. This could lead to reinforcing existing inequalities. It is often those who do not have a voice or are not included in technical discussions or policy development who experience these inequities and do not have their experiences represented in decision-making tools.
Additionally, the model results suggest that collaboration and coordination between the groups, and therefore the FWUCs, not just within the groups/FWUCs, should be a priority. The Stung Chinit FWUC tended to be successful in supplying water to their members; however, this was sometimes at the expense of other groups farther down the canal system, such as groups 6 and 8. Staggering planting times, when irrigation demand is the greatest, between the groups may allow for more water for everyone. Coordination of rice plantings and who plants once, twice, or three times per year should also be planned among all groups collaboratively because planting is the more water-intensive period, and therefore when shortages occur.
There were many aspects of the watershed that were reflected in the survey data that were still not well represented in the model, for example, irrigation demands outside of the irrigation scheme that was studied. For a better representation of these areas, a complete understanding of the irrigation demands of the system should be improved as more information becomes available. Additionally, access to water is only one aspect of agriculture. Many households indicated the importance of agrochemical use, such as fertilizer and pesticides, which should be further investigated, both to better understand the impact of these products on yield, as well as on the environment and water quality. While water access is still a challenge for many in the watershed, coping strategies when there are shortages is another major aspect where poverty and water intersect. Understanding who can still maintain their crops during shortages and who cannot should be better understood to develop a more complete picture of the interlinkages between water for agriculture and poverty, particularly under climate change. For this analysis, scenarios of climate change were not considered but should be in future work.
These findings point to several potential policy linkages or interventions. The model points to the opportunity to engage with the Ministry of Water Resources and Meteorology; the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries; and the Ministry of the Environment to inform the model’s findings, particularly in terms of overall access to water resources and illuminate the influence of issues such as poverty, gender, location, and information access. This study can inform the National Strategic Development Plan’s Strategy for Agriculture and Water to achieve their goals around water resources development and management, poverty reduction, and economic growth for households in the Stung Chinit watershed.
The Ministry of Water Resources and Meteorology; the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries; and the Ministry of the Environment institute planned capacity strengthening and information sharing interventions with gender mainstreaming in the agricultural sector, water resources, and climate change under the coordination and direction of the Ministry of Women’s Affairs.
This ministry has just recently endorsed Neary Rattanak (2019–2023) for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women in Cambodia [82]. This five-year strategic plan, together with the National Strategic Plan on Gender and Climate Change 2014–2023, Master Plan for Gender and Climate Change (2018–2030), and Action Plan on Gender and Climate Change 2019–2023, as well as other national guidelines for gender mainstreaming [83,84] in these prioritized sectors, will be a roadmap for the development of programs that help to address the needs of women and other vulnerable groups [82,85]. For example, addressing apparent information gaps between men and women regarding FUWC operations and schedules could be one of the focus areas.
Finally, it is evident from this analysis that the benefits of water supply are not equally shared among all areas of the watershed such that proximity to a main canal or up/downstream can substantially impact a household’s access to water. Given the connection of water access and climate change vulnerability to poverty reduction, it would be important to evaluate whether policies, such as the Law on Water Resources Management (2007) and the National Water Resources Policy (2004), have any specific focus or mechanisms directed at addressing these issues of unequal access.

5. Conclusions

The connection and dependency of watersheds and human wellbeing are due to the watersheds’ provision of water resources that are essential for human life, agricultural production, fish habitat, transportation, and other social and economic activities. Hydrological processes in a watershed impact peoples’ lives, as annual cycles of dry and wet seasons affect peoples’ annual socio-economic activities and traditions.
This study evidenced the strong linkages that exist between sustainable water resources management objectives and poverty reduction efforts. Model results show that by linking qualitative and quantitative analyses of social and hydrological information, a better representation of the location-based inequalities within a watershed can be achieved. The qualitative and indicator analysis presented a broader understanding of the social-hydrological linkages. Having this broader understanding of the social inequality implications in connection to water access can help to formulate policies that ensure water security at the local level and support poverty reduction at the national level.
Inequalities that lead to poverty, such as the water distribution challenges within the Stung Chinit irrigation system, with those most downstream receiving the least water, are known [29,61,62,73]. While this information is known, it has not been factored into basin-level modeling work or watershed-level plans. This is a critical issue for ensuring the sustainable management of water resources and poverty reduction. In this case study, we demonstrated how to factor in small-scale distribution inequalities and challenges into watershed level analysis to give decision makers at the watershed scale the knowledge and the tools required to address these inequalities.

Supplementary Materials

The following are available online at https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/w13131848/s1, Table S1: Research design, Document S2: Key informant interview questions, Document S3: Frequency tables for survey questions.

Author Contributions

The conceptualization and funding acquisition of this work were conducted by L.F., B.P.R., M.L. and A.H.-L., with supervision and project administration provided by L.F. Survey data curation and analysis for poverty indicators was conducted by C.S., A.L., P.U. and S.E. Gender analysis from the survey data was conducted by J.Y.-C.H. and H.N. Wealth index calculations and analysis were conducted by S.E., A.L. and L.V. Model modifications and analysis was conducted by S.B. Visualization of model results was conducted by M.R.M. The writing—original draft preparation of this article was conducted by L.F., S.B. and M.R.M. and the writing—review and editing was conducted by L.F., M.R.M., S.B., H.N., J.Y.-C.H., C.S., P.U. and B.P.R. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was partly funded by Sida core support to the Stockholm Environment Institute and partly by The Asia Foundation.

Institutional Review Board Statement

The study was conducted with verbal consent during the survey and interview process. The surveys follow the ethical protocols from the Kandence survey company led by Sunil Pillai [email protected].

Informed Consent Statement

Informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the study.

Data Availability Statement

The data that support the findings of this study are available on request from the corresponding author.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank our project partners and stakeholders who supported us with the key informant interviews, in particular, the local Sustainable Water Partnership team—Min Bunnara, Sen Kimtheng, Chourn Phyroum, and Sok Soleak. Thank you to the Winrock International team—Liz Kendall, Robert O’Sullivan, and Eric Viala—for supporting this project. Thanks go to Natalia Biskupska for her financial management with local partners the SEI Asia Center and Sunil Pillai from Kandence International for executing the survey. Thanks go to Marie Jürisoo for her support with contractual aspects as the SEI HQ Operations Director. Thanks go to the SEI-US water program for support in the preparation of this article.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Flowchart of methods used.
Figure 1. Flowchart of methods used.
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Figure 2. Map of the Stung Chinit Watershed and its location within Cambodia.
Figure 2. Map of the Stung Chinit Watershed and its location within Cambodia.
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Figure 3. Multidimensional poverty analysis framework used to guide the literature review process.
Figure 3. Multidimensional poverty analysis framework used to guide the literature review process.
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Figure 4. Map of the Stung Chinit Watershed and irrigation schemes (left), and schematic of the Chinit and Taing Krasaing reservoirs and irrigation schemes (right). The area serviced by each irrigation scheme was called a group, labeled with a number, and shown in the colored areas on the map (left). The schematic (right) shows the same groups and how they received water from the reservoirs. Arrows show the flow of water. Blue solid lines indicate rivers, black lines indicate irrigation water going to the groups, and blue dotted lines indicate return flows to the system.
Figure 4. Map of the Stung Chinit Watershed and irrigation schemes (left), and schematic of the Chinit and Taing Krasaing reservoirs and irrigation schemes (right). The area serviced by each irrigation scheme was called a group, labeled with a number, and shown in the colored areas on the map (left). The schematic (right) shows the same groups and how they received water from the reservoirs. Arrows show the flow of water. Blue solid lines indicate rivers, black lines indicate irrigation water going to the groups, and blue dotted lines indicate return flows to the system.
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Figure 5. Graphical representation of the MDPA indicators described in Table 4. The sizes of the petals correspond to the value of the indicator ranging from 0 (least desired values) and 1 (most desired values). Petal colors correspond to wealth index values differences between the “richest” quintile and the “poorest” quintile.
Figure 5. Graphical representation of the MDPA indicators described in Table 4. The sizes of the petals correspond to the value of the indicator ranging from 0 (least desired values) and 1 (most desired values). Petal colors correspond to wealth index values differences between the “richest” quintile and the “poorest” quintile.
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Figure 6. Map of the Stung Chinit watershed and number of hours per week households spent collecting water.
Figure 6. Map of the Stung Chinit watershed and number of hours per week households spent collecting water.
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Figure 7. Household’s responses to who was responsible for collecting and ensuring that there was enough water in the home for domestic use by gender group (left) and by age group (right). Both HHH indicates both household heads were selected, while Female HHH and Male HHH indicate female and male household heads, respectively. Other both means at least one person of each gender who were not both household heads were selected. Other female means one or more females who were not the household head were selected and other male means one or more males who were not the household head were selected.
Figure 7. Household’s responses to who was responsible for collecting and ensuring that there was enough water in the home for domestic use by gender group (left) and by age group (right). Both HHH indicates both household heads were selected, while Female HHH and Male HHH indicate female and male household heads, respectively. Other both means at least one person of each gender who were not both household heads were selected. Other female means one or more females who were not the household head were selected and other male means one or more males who were not the household head were selected.
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Figure 8. Map of the Stung Chinit watershed with irrigation canals, a 15 km buffer around irrigation canals, the households that responded that they used canals for irrigation in the dry season ((left), question 93 and 94), the households that responded that an FWUC did exist in their village or community (center, question 122), and the households within the buffer assigned to the nearest irrigation group (right).
Figure 8. Map of the Stung Chinit watershed with irrigation canals, a 15 km buffer around irrigation canals, the households that responded that they used canals for irrigation in the dry season ((left), question 93 and 94), the households that responded that an FWUC did exist in their village or community (center, question 122), and the households within the buffer assigned to the nearest irrigation group (right).
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Figure 9. Percentage of households who used various irrigation source types by gender of the household head. GW refers to groundwater, SW refers to surface water, Combo refers to a combination of 2 or more source types. Dry season and wet season sources are combined based on responses from questions 93 and 94.
Figure 9. Percentage of households who used various irrigation source types by gender of the household head. GW refers to groundwater, SW refers to surface water, Combo refers to a combination of 2 or more source types. Dry season and wet season sources are combined based on responses from questions 93 and 94.
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Figure 10. Months where households within 15 km of irrigation canals, who stated that they used canals for irrigation (question 93 and 94) experienced shortages in irrigation supply in the last year (based on responses to question 104). The groups refer to the closest irrigation group to the household. The irrigation groups are shown in Figure 3.
Figure 10. Months where households within 15 km of irrigation canals, who stated that they used canals for irrigation (question 93 and 94) experienced shortages in irrigation supply in the last year (based on responses to question 104). The groups refer to the closest irrigation group to the household. The irrigation groups are shown in Figure 3.
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Figure 11. Irrigation issues experienced in the last 12 months (responses to survey question 105) by households within 15 km of the irrigation canals that stated they used canals for irrigation in questions 93 or 94. The groups refer to the closest irrigation group to the household. The irrigation groups are shown in Figure 4. “Phys” means physical issues, which correspond to the responses “my field is too far from the canal,” “not enough tertiary canals,” or “my field is at too high an elevation.” “Man” means management issues, which correspond to the responses “the upstream people take more water than they should, so I don’t get any,” “there is not enough water late in the season,” “there is not enough water early in the season,” “the quantity of water overall is too little,” or “the timing of water does not suit my needs.” “Mon” indicates monetary issues, which correspond to the responses “I cannot afford the water/FWUC fees” and “I cannot afford to pump the water onto my fields.”
Figure 11. Irrigation issues experienced in the last 12 months (responses to survey question 105) by households within 15 km of the irrigation canals that stated they used canals for irrigation in questions 93 or 94. The groups refer to the closest irrigation group to the household. The irrigation groups are shown in Figure 4. “Phys” means physical issues, which correspond to the responses “my field is too far from the canal,” “not enough tertiary canals,” or “my field is at too high an elevation.” “Man” means management issues, which correspond to the responses “the upstream people take more water than they should, so I don’t get any,” “there is not enough water late in the season,” “there is not enough water early in the season,” “the quantity of water overall is too little,” or “the timing of water does not suit my needs.” “Mon” indicates monetary issues, which correspond to the responses “I cannot afford the water/FWUC fees” and “I cannot afford to pump the water onto my fields.”
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Figure 12. Number of times per year that households within 15 km of each irrigation group who used canals for irrigation (questions 94 and 95) grew rice (based on responses from question 74).
Figure 12. Number of times per year that households within 15 km of each irrigation group who used canals for irrigation (questions 94 and 95) grew rice (based on responses from question 74).
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Figure 13. Violin plots of the average percent irrigation coverage during all years when looking at different year types (dry, average, and wet) and with or without poverty and gender considerations in the model structure. The data was separated by scenario (1–6 as described in Table 6) and irrigation group (1–8, as shown in Figure 4).
Figure 13. Violin plots of the average percent irrigation coverage during all years when looking at different year types (dry, average, and wet) and with or without poverty and gender considerations in the model structure. The data was separated by scenario (1–6 as described in Table 6) and irrigation group (1–8, as shown in Figure 4).
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Table 1. Actor mapping of the KIIs.
Table 1. Actor mapping of the KIIs.
ScaleName
National GovernmentFreshwater Wetlands Conservation, Ministry of Environment (MoE)
Department of Rural Water Supply at the Ministry of Rural Development (MRD)
Department of Gender and Equality and Department of Women and Education, Ministry of Women’s Affairs (MoWA)
Department of Agricultural Engineering, Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF)
Tonle Sap Authority (TSA)
Provincial GovernmentAgriculture Irrigation Office of Provincial Department of Water Resources and Methodology
Local GovernmentStung Chinit Cheung Farmer Water User Committee (FWUC)
Beung Commune
Local OrganizationBeung Touk Fishery Community
Beung Kroy Fishery Community
Veal O’Kdey Community Forest
NGOsWinrock International
Cambodia Development Resource Institute
Oxfam Cambodia
Table 2. Sample size and distribution.
Table 2. Sample size and distribution.
TotalUpper WatershedMiddle WatershedLower Watershed
Households110,668361258,23548,821
Sample Households800270270270
Table 3. Number of sample villages and sample households per village.
Table 3. Number of sample villages and sample households per village.
TotalUpper WatershedMiddle WatershedLower Watershed
Sample Villages45151515
HHs per village18181818
Table 4. List and description of indicators developed for the MDPA.
Table 4. List and description of indicators developed for the MDPA.
Poverty DimensionWater Use SectorIndicator NameDescriptionUnit of Measurement
ResourcesDrinking and DomesticR1. Drinking water availabilityProportion of households who in the past twelve months had enough drinking water availabilityPercentage (overall sample)
Rice ProductionR2. Water availability for irrigation Proportion of households who had enough water for irrigation the past yearPercentage in relation to households that practiced agriculture
FishingR3. Resources from fishing Proportion of households who had resources from fishing for food provisionPercentage in relation to households that fished
LivestockR4. Resources from livestock Proportion of households who had resources from livestock, such as income and/or food provisionPercentage in relation to households that had livestock
Opportunities and ChoiceDrinking and DomesticO1. Time collecting waterProportion of households who spend no time or less than 30 min collecting water Percentage (overall sample)
Rice ProductionO2. Water access for irrigationProportion of households who had access to rice irrigation for subsistencePercentage in relation to households that practiced agriculture
FishingO3. Access to fishingProportion of households who had access to fishing Percentage (overall sample)
LivestockO4. Water access for livestockProportion of households who had enough water for livestock in the past twelve monthsPercentage in relation to households that had livestock
Power and VoiceDrinking and DomesticP1. Water supply decisions at the household level Proportion of households where decisions about water supply were made by female HHH/male HHH and spousePercentage (overall sample)
Rice ProductionP2. Access to the FWUCProportion of households who had access to FWUCPercentage (overall sample)
FishingP3. Fishing activities decisions at the household levelProportion of households where decisions about fishing activities were made by female HHH/male HHH and spouse Percentage in relation to households that fished
LivestockP4. Livestock activities decisions at the household levelProportion of households where decisions about livestock activities were made by female HHH/male HHH and spouse Percentage in relation to households that had livestock
Human SecurityDrinking and DomesticH1. Food shortageProportion of households who did not have food shortages in the past twelve monthsPercentage (overall sample)
Rice ProductionH2. Natural disasters’ effects on agricultureProportion of households who did not suffer some effects of natural disasters on agriculture the past twelve monthsPercentage in relation to households that practiced agriculture
FishingH3. Natural disasters’ effectsProportion of households who did not suffer some effects of natural disasters the past twelve monthsPercentage (overall sample)
LivestockH4. Natural disasters’ effects on livestock activities Proportion of households who did not suffer some effects of natural disasters on livestock the past twelve monthsPercentage in relation to households that had livestock
Table 5. List of variables included in the wealth index estimation.
Table 5. List of variables included in the wealth index estimation.
NVariableExplanation
1WI_MEMBERS ROOMNumber of people per bedroom
2WI_ELECTRHome had electricity
3WI_RADIOHome had a radio
4WI_TVHome had a television
5WI_FURNHome had furniture (bed, chairs, table, sofa, closet)
6WI_SOUND_EQHome had a mini-component or sound equipment
7WI_BIKEHome had a bike
8WI_OVENHome had a kitchen (gas, electric, etc.), oven
9WI_WATER_PUMPHome had a water pump
10WI_MOTORBIKEHome had a motorbike
11WI_H_TRACTORHome had a hand tractor
12WI_F_BACKPACKHome had a fumigation backpack
13WI_COOK_LPGGASType of fuel house mainly used was LPG
14WI_COOK_STICKSType of fuel the house mainly used was wood or fuel sticks
15WI_FL_CEMENTMain floor material was concrete or cement
16WI_FL_TILEMain floor material was tile, ceramic, or mosaic
17WI_FL_WOODMain floor material was wood
18WI_ROOF_METALMain roof material was galvanized iron, aluminum, or other metal sheets
19WI_ROOF_TILEMain roof material was tile
20WI_WALL_CEMENTMain wall material was brick, concrete, cement, or stone
21WI_WALL_WOODMain wall material was wood, logs, or plywood
22WI_WALL_METALMain wall material was galvanized iron, aluminum, or other metal sheets
23WI_GARB_BURNUsual way to dispose of garbage was to burn it
Table 6. Scenarios implemented in the WEAP model after the survey results.
Table 6. Scenarios implemented in the WEAP model after the survey results.
Scenario NameRice Crop SchedulePrioritize Different DemandsIrrigation Access
S1: BaselineBaselineDuring shortages, ensured supply to irrigation as a priority; no flow requirement implementedAssumed equal access across groups
S2: ICS 1Groups 1, 2, and 5 grew wet season, early wet season, and dry season rice; all other groups remained as in the baseline
S3: ICS + FR_Q95 1During shortages, ensured 95 percentile flow downstream of irrigation diversions as a priority
S4: Baseline + MDPA 1BaselineDuring shortages, ensured supply to irrigation as a priority; no flow requirement implementedRepresented poverty and gender survey-based inequity in access across groups
S5: ICS + MDPA 1Groups 1, 2, and 5 grew wet season, early wet season, and dry season rice; all other groups remained as in the baseline
S6: ICS + FR_Q95 + MDPA 1During shortages, ensured 95 percentile flow downstream of irrigation diversions as a priority
1 ICS—increase crop schedule; FR_Q95—flow requirement at Q95; MDPA—inequity represented in the model.
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Forni, L.; Bresney, S.; Espinoza, S.; Lavado, A.; Mautner, M.R.; Yi-Chen Han, J.; Nguyen, H.; Sreyphea, C.; Uniacke, P.; Villarroel, L.; et al. Social Hydrological Analysis for Poverty Reduction in Community-Managed Water Resources Systems in Cambodia. Water 2021, 13, 1848. https://doi.org/10.3390/w13131848

AMA Style

Forni L, Bresney S, Espinoza S, Lavado A, Mautner MR, Yi-Chen Han J, Nguyen H, Sreyphea C, Uniacke P, Villarroel L, et al. Social Hydrological Analysis for Poverty Reduction in Community-Managed Water Resources Systems in Cambodia. Water. 2021; 13(13):1848. https://doi.org/10.3390/w13131848

Chicago/Turabian Style

Forni, Laura, Susan Bresney, Sophia Espinoza, Angela Lavado, Marina RL Mautner, Jenny Yi-Chen Han, Ha Nguyen, Chap Sreyphea, Paula Uniacke, Luis Villarroel, and et al. 2021. "Social Hydrological Analysis for Poverty Reduction in Community-Managed Water Resources Systems in Cambodia" Water 13, no. 13: 1848. https://doi.org/10.3390/w13131848

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