Scientific article
English

A systematic review of success factors in the community management of rural water supplies over the past 30 years

Published inWater Policy, vol. 17, no. 5, p. 963-983
Publication date2015
Abstract

Community management is the accepted management model for rural water supplies in many low and middleincome countries. However, endemic problems in the sustainability and scalability of this model are leading many to conclude we have reached the limits of an approach that is too reliant on voluntarism and informality. Accepting this criticism but recognising that many cases of success have been reported over the past 30 years, this study systematically reviews and analyses the development pattern of 174 successful community management case studies. The synthesis confirms the premise that for community management to be sustained at scale, community institutions need a 'plus' that includes long-term external support, with the majority of high performing cases involving financial support, technical advice and managerial advice. Internal community characteristics were also found to be influential in terms of success, including collective initiative, strong leadership and institutional transparency. Through a meta-analysis of success in different regions, the paper also indicates an important finding on the direct relationship between success and the prevailing socio-economic wealth in a society. This holds implications for policy and programme design with a need to consider how broad structural conditions may dictate the relative success of different forms of community management.

Keywords
  • Community management
  • Participation
  • Rural water supply
  • Service delivery
  • Sustainability
Affiliation entities Not a UNIGE publication
Citation (ISO format)
HUTCHINGS, Paul et al. A systematic review of success factors in the community management of rural water supplies over the past 30 years. In: Water Policy, 2015, vol. 17, n° 5, p. 963–983. doi: 10.2166/wp.2015.128
Main files (1)
Article (Published version)
accessLevelRestricted
Identifiers
Journal ISSN1366-7017
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