Institutional transformation in Uzbekistan's agricultural and water resources administration: The creation of a new bureaucracy

This paper analyses the institutional transformation of the Uzbek agriculture and water resources administration after Uzbekistan gained independence in 1991. This transformation involved the creation of a joint Ministry of Agriculture and Water Resources in 1997 out of two separate Ministries, and subsequently the process of transforming the region and district based administrative water management system, extended since the creation of the USSR, into an irrigation basin water management system based on the hydrological principles. The latter involved the creation of the Irrigation Basin System Management Authorities in 2003. This study suggests that the merger of the two ministries in 1997 came about as a result of a broader process of organizational change that was part of the post-Soviet state-building process. It was not determined primarily by the idea of achieving equitable water distribution as a normative principle or creating two equally important departments within one ministry, as has been suggested by Wegerich (2005). The analysis of the move towards creating the Irrigation Basin System Management Authorities in 2003 shows that the change should not be seen as a move towards the recreation of a separate Ministry of Water and Ministry of Agriculture. That is, it is not a ‘de-merger process’ as has, again, been suggested by Wegerich (2005:462). It should rather be seen as a separation of tasks within a single ministry, and a move of the MAWR as a whole to reduce hokims (regional/district governors) influence over its tasks. Overall, the study shows that Uzbekistan’s water resources management institutions and organizations are created mainly to serve state-controlled agricultural production. Decisions on water allocation and distribution have always been influenced by the agricultural departments, also when there still was a separate Water Ministry before 1997. Reform processes in the water sector have usually been determined by reforms in agriculture. The theoretical focus of the paper is the analysis of administrative and policy reform process a situation of a ‘state-centric’ politics (Grindle (1999), in contrast to a ‘society-centric’ politics. The latter has dominantly been the empirical reference as well as conceptual and instrumental framework of the Western ‘policy process’ literature. Such frameworks may not be (fully) applicable in evidently statecentric situations like Uzbekistan. The study explores where the initiative for institutional change in the agriculture and water resources domains came from, how new institutional models were generated, how political and economic actors adapt to institutional changes, and, overall how the dynamics of institutional transformation in Uzbekistan is different from that in ‘society centric’ contexts. 1 Resul Yalcin is Postdoctoral Researcher and Peter P. Mollinga is Senior Researcher at the Centre for Development Research (ZEF), University of Bonn. The field work for this paper was conducted in the context of the NeWater, an Integrated Project in the 6 EU Framework Programme Funded by the EU. Contract No: 511179 (GOCE).

[1]  Thomas Menkhoff,et al.  Strategic Groups in a Knowledge Society: Knowledge Elites as Drivers of Biotechnology Development in Singapore , 2008 .

[2]  B. D. Dhawan Irrigation in India′s Agricultural Development: Productivity, Stability, Equity , 1987 .

[3]  Eckart Ehlers,et al.  Dyke system planing : Theory and practice in Can , 2011 .

[4]  E. Rap The success of a policy model: Irrigation management transfer in Mexico , 2006 .

[5]  W. Kloezen Accounting for water. Institutional viability and impacts of market-oriented irrigation interventions in Central Mexico , 2002 .

[6]  Richard Smith,et al.  Closing the digital divide , 2003, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[7]  R. Repetto Skimming the water: rent-seeking and the performance of public irrigation systems , 1986 .

[8]  David Moldenjv Water for Food, Water for Life , 2007 .

[9]  Solvay Gerke,et al.  Local Knowledge as a Strategic Resource: Fisheries in the Seasonal Floodplains of the Mekong Delta, Vietnam , 2009 .

[10]  L. Ohlsson Hydropolitics : conflicts over water as a development constraint , 1995 .

[11]  S. Lukes Power: A Radical View , 1974 .

[12]  Veronika Fuest,et al.  Partnerschaft, Patronage oder Paternalismus? : eine empirische Analyse der Praxis universitärer Forschungskooperation mit Entwicklungsländern , 2005 .

[13]  Fabian Scholtes,et al.  How does moral knowledge matter in development practice , and how can it be researched ? , 2009 .

[14]  P. Mollinga,et al.  For a political sociology of water resources management , 2008 .

[15]  Steven L. Goldman,et al.  Technology and Human Values , 1981 .

[16]  Conrad Schetter,et al.  Understanding local violence: Security arrangements in Kandahar, Kunduz and Paktia , 2006 .

[17]  Solvay Gerke,et al.  Political Budget Cycles and Fiscal Decentralization , 2006 .

[18]  Hans-Dieter Evers,et al.  Solar PV rural electrification and energy-poverty: A review and conceptual framework with reference to Ghana , 2009 .

[19]  Christine Noelle-Karimi,et al.  Group Culture , Knowledge and Development 26 Village Institutions in the Perception of National and International Actors in Afghanistan , 2006 .

[20]  R. Chambers,et al.  Managing the main system: canal irrigation's blind spot , 1980 .

[21]  Fabian Scholtes,et al.  Status quo and prospects of smallholders in the Brazilian sugarcane and ethanol sector: Lessons for development and poverty reduction , 2009 .

[22]  Cornelis Disco,et al.  Remaking “Nature”: The Ecological Turn in Dutch Water Management , 2002 .

[23]  B. R. Nikku The politics of policy : participatory irrigation management in Andhra Pradesh , 2006 .

[24]  P. Mollinga,et al.  On the waterfront : water distribution, technology and agrarian change in a South Indian canal irrigation system , 1998 .

[25]  Bernie ter Steege,et al.  Infrastructure and water distribution in the Asqalan and Sufi-Qarayateem canal irrigation systems in the Kunduz River Basin , 2007 .

[26]  Wolfram Laube,et al.  Creative bureaucracy: Balancing power in irrigation administration in northern Ghana , 2009 .

[27]  Thomas Menkhoff,et al.  Riau Vegetables for Singapore Consumers: A Collaborative Knowledge-Transfer Project across the Straits of Malacca , 2007 .

[28]  M. Archer,et al.  Realist Social Theory: The Morphogenetic Approach , 1997 .

[29]  D. Dennis,et al.  Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed , 1998 .

[30]  Mayra Moro Coco,et al.  Steven Lukes: Power: A Radical View. Palgrave Macmillan, Londres. 2005 , 2006 .

[31]  James Ferguson,et al.  The Anti-Politics Machine: Development, Depoliticization and Bureaucratic Power in Lesotho , 1992 .

[32]  Hans-Dieter Evers,et al.  Wissen ist Macht: Experten als strategische Gruppe , 2005 .

[33]  Wolfram Laube,et al.  The promise and perils of water reforms: Perspectives from Northern Ghana , 2007 .

[34]  Hans-Dieter Evers,et al.  Emerging epistemic landscapes: Knowledge clusters in Ho Chi Minh City and the Mekong Delta , 2009 .

[35]  Hans-Dieter Evers,et al.  Constructing Epistemic Landscapes: Methods of GIS-Based Mapping , 2009 .

[36]  James C. Scott,et al.  Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed , 1999 .

[37]  P. Hoebink European Donors and ‘Good Governance’: Condition or Goal? , 2006 .

[38]  Boubacar Barry,et al.  Changing interfaces in Volta Basin water management: Customary, national and transboundary , 2006 .

[39]  Sally Falk Moore Law and Social Change: The Semi-Autonomous Social Field as an Appropriate Subject of Study , 1973 .

[40]  Hans-Dieter Evers,et al.  Solar photovoltaic electrification and rural energy-poverty in Ghana , 2008 .

[41]  Katja Mielke,et al.  On the concept of 'village' in Northeastern Afghanistan: Explorations from Kunduz Province , 2007 .

[42]  Solvay Gerke,et al.  Closing the Digital Divide: Southeast Asia's Path towards a Knowledge Society ; paper delivered at the Centre for East and South-East Asian Studies public lecture series "Focus Asia", 25-27 May, 2004 , 2004 .

[43]  Kees Van Straaten,et al.  Modules for modernisation: Colonial irrigation in India and the technological dimension of agrarian change , 1995 .

[44]  Frank G. W. Jaspers,et al.  Institutional arrangements for integrated river basin management , 2003 .

[45]  Wolfgang Muno Harold D. Lasswell, Politics: Who Gets What, When, How, Cleveland/New York 1936 , 2007 .

[46]  T. Menkhoff Knowledge Society,Vision and Social Construction of Reality in Germany and Singapore , 2008 .

[47]  Susan Leigh Star,et al.  Institutional Ecology, `Translations' and Boundary Objects: Amateurs and Professionals in Berkeley's Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, 1907-39 , 1989 .

[48]  Michael Hill,et al.  The Policy process: A reader , 1997 .

[49]  Fabian Scholtes,et al.  Analysing and explaining power in a capability perspective 1 , 2010 .

[50]  Jason Mazzone,et al.  The Benefits of Social Capital , 2003 .

[51]  Solvay Gerke,et al.  Strategic Group Analysis , 2008 .

[52]  A. Bottrall Fits and misfits over time and space: Technologies and institutions of water development for South Asian agriculture , 1992 .

[53]  Anthony Turton,et al.  Hydropolitics in the developing world: a southern African perspective , 2002 .

[54]  Eva Youkhana,et al.  Small towns face big challenge: The management of piped systems after the water sector reform in Ghana , 2008 .

[55]  Wolfram Laube,et al.  Changing the course of history? Implementing water reforms in Ghana and South Africa , 2009 .

[56]  Ramaswamy Sakthivadivel,et al.  Limits to leapfrogging: issues in transposing successful river basin management institutions in the developing world. , 2005 .

[57]  Alex Bolding,et al.  The Politics of Irrigation Reform. Contested Policy Formulation and Implementation in Asia, Africa and Latin America , 2004 .

[58]  Hans-Dieter Evers,et al.  Knowledge Loss: Managing Local Knowledge in Rural Uzbekistan , 2006 .

[59]  Benjamin Schraven,et al.  Erratic rains and erratic markets: Environmental change, economic globalisation and the expansion of shallow groundwater irrigation in West Africa , 2008 .

[60]  Benjamin Schraven,et al.  Doctoral degrees for capacity development: Results from a survey among African BiGS-DR alumni , 2009 .

[61]  Hans-Dieter Evers,et al.  Strategic Group Formation in the Mekong Delta: The Development of a Modern Hydraulic Society , 2009 .

[62]  Hans-Dieter Evers,et al.  Social capital and sustainable development: Theories and concepts , 2005 .

[63]  J. Mooij,et al.  Policy Processes : An Annotated Bibliography on Policy Processes , with Particular Emphasis on India , 2003 .

[64]  Anna-Katharina Hornidge,et al.  Singapore: The Knowledge-Hub in the Straits of Malacca. , 2006 .

[65]  Hans-Dieter Evers,et al.  Knowledge hubs and knowledge clusters: Designing a knowledge architecture for development. , 2008 .

[66]  Norman Long,et al.  Demythologizing planned intervention: an actor perspective. , 1989 .

[67]  P. Mollinga,et al.  Water policy – Water politics: Social engineering and strategic action in water sector reform , 2008 .

[68]  G. Kitching Karl Marx and the philosophy of praxis , 1988 .

[69]  M. Rosegrant,et al.  Asian food production in the 1990s: Irrigation investment and management policy , 1993 .

[70]  J. Gupta,et al.  The EU Water Framework Directive: Challenges for institutional implementation , 2005 .

[71]  J. Ferguson The Anti-Politics Machine , 1994 .

[72]  Hans-Dieter Evers,et al.  Knowledge hubs along the Straits of Malacca , 2007 .

[73]  P. Mollinga,et al.  Microcredit for rural water supply and sanitation in the Mekong Delta: Policy implementation between the needs for clean water and ‘beautiful latrines' , 2009 .

[74]  Veronika Fuest,et al.  Policies, practices and outcomes of demand-oriented community water supply in Ghana: the National Community Water and Sanitation Programme 1994-2004 , 2005 .

[75]  G. Brady Governing the Commons: The Evolution of Institutions for Collective Action , 1993 .

[76]  Jennifer Hauck,et al.  Histories of water and fisheries management in Northern Ghana , 2008 .

[77]  Anna-Katharina Hornidge,et al.  Hornidge, Anna-Katharina- Defining Knowledge in Germany and Singapore: Do the Country-Specific Definitions of Knowledge Converge? , 2006 .

[78]  Robert Hunter Wade,et al.  The system of administrative and political corruption: Canal irrigation in South India , 1982 .

[79]  Rajindar K. Koshal,et al.  Water pollution and human health , 1976, Water, Air, and Soil Pollution.

[80]  Usman Shah,et al.  Livelihoods in the Asqalan and Sufi-Qarayateem canal irrigation systems in the Kunduz River Basin , 2007 .

[81]  P. Mollinga,et al.  The rational organisation of dissent: Boundary concepts, boundary objects and boundary settings in the interdisciplinary study of natural resources management , 2008 .

[82]  P. Mollinga,et al.  Sleeping with the enemy: Dichotomies and polarisation in Indian policy debates on the environmental and social effects of irrigation , 2004 .

[83]  M. Grindle,et al.  Bureaucrats, Politicians, and Peasants in Mexico: A Case Study in Public Policy. , 1977 .

[84]  P. Mollinga,et al.  The Water Resources Policy Process in India: Centralisation, Polarisation and New Demands on Governance , 2008 .

[85]  Vaclav Smil,et al.  Hydropolitics of the Nile Valley , 1981 .

[86]  M. Mackintosh,et al.  Development policy and public action , 1992 .

[87]  P. Sabatier An advocacy coalition framework of policy change and the role of policy-oriented learning therein , 1988 .

[88]  Solvay Gerke,et al.  The Strategic Importance of the Straits of Malacca , 2006 .

[89]  James Ferguson The anti-politics machine : "development," depoliticization, and bureaucratic power in Lesotho , 1994 .

[90]  H. Evers,et al.  Social and Cultural Dimensions of Market Expansion , 2007 .

[91]  M. Grindle In Quest of the Political: The Political Economy of Development Policy Making , 1999 .

[92]  M. Zeitoun,et al.  Hydro-hegemony – a framework for analysis of trans-boundary water conflicts , 2006 .

[93]  Claudia Pahl-Wostl,et al.  Towards sustainability in the water sector – The importance of human actors and processes of social learning , 2002, Aquatic Sciences.

[94]  Geoffrey T. McDonald,et al.  Critical review of Integrated Water Resources Management: moving beyond polarised discourse. , 2009 .

[95]  Hw Harry Lintsen Two Centuries of Central Water Management in the Netherlands , 2002 .

[96]  Veronika Fuest,et al.  Demand-oriented Community Water Supply in Ghana: Policies, Practices and Outcomes , 2006 .

[97]  Ilana Löwy,et al.  The Strength of Loose Concepts — Boundary Concepts, Federative Experimental Strategies and Disciplinary Growth: The Case of Immunology , 1992 .

[98]  Wiebe E. Bijker The Oosterschelde Storm Surge Barrier: A Test Case for Dutch Water Technology, Management, and Politics , 2002 .

[99]  Integrated water resources management : global theory, emerging practice and local needs , 2006 .

[100]  Conrad Schetter,et al.  Ethnicity and the political reconstruction of Afghanistan , 2005 .

[101]  J. Harriss,et al.  Depoliticizing development: The World Bank and social capital , 2001 .

[102]  Bernd Kuzmits,et al.  Cross-bordering water management in Central Asia , 2006 .

[103]  S. Kuks,et al.  The evolution of national water regimes in Europe : transitions in water rights and water policies , 2004 .

[104]  Katja Mielke,et al.  Local Governance in Warsaj and Farkhar Districts , 2007 .

[105]  Anna-Katharina Hornidge,et al.  'Follow the Innovation‘ - a Joint Experimentation & Learning Approach to Transdisciplinary Innovation Research , 2009 .

[106]  W. Espeland The Struggle for Water: Politics, Rationality, and Identity in the American Southwest , 1998 .

[107]  Irit Eguavoen,et al.  The acquisition of water storage facilities in the Abay River Basin, Ethiopia , 2009 .