Caraka Tani: Journal of Sustainable Agriculture
Vol 40, No 2 (2025): In press April

Network Governance of Rural Water Management to Cope with Adverse Impacts of Climate Change: Evidence from An Irrigated Dry Area in Central Java, Indonesia

Mohammad Rondhi (Department of Agribusiness, Faculty of Agriculture, Universitas Jember, Jember)
Syamsul Hadi (Department of Agribusiness, Faculty of Agriculture, Universitas Muhammadiyah Jember, Jember)
Muhamad Imanuddin (Department of Agribusiness, Faculty of Agriculture, Universitas Muria Kudus, Kudus)
Yasuhiro Mori (Department of Sustainable Agriculture, Rakuno Gakuen University, Ebetsu)
Takumi Kondo (Research Faculty of Agriculture, Hokkaido University, Sapporo)
Rokhani Rokhani (Department of Agricultural Extension, Faculty of Agriculture, Universitas Jember, Jember)
Anik Suwandari (Department of Agribusiness, Faculty of Agriculture, Universitas Jember, Jember)
Ebban Bagus Kuntadi (Department of Agribusiness, Faculty of Agriculture, Universitas Jember, Jember)
Shohibul Ulum (Department of Agribusiness, Faculty of Agriculture, Universitas Jember, Jember)
Nita Anisya Firdaus (Department of Agribusiness, Faculty of Agriculture, Universitas Jember, Jember)



Article Info

Publish Date
03 Apr 2025

Abstract

Irrigation management in Indonesia has always involved challenges. There are at least three phases in irrigation management: the rain-fed phase, technical irrigation in irrigation buildings, and technical irrigation to mitigate climate change (CC). This study investigated irrigation management based on local wisdom as a form of CC adaptation. The research was conducted in Klambu Kanan Irrigation District (KKID), where 11,005 ha of rice fields are irrigated in three regencies. The subjects of this research were 40 irrigation Water User Associations (WUAs), and the research instrument was a model that provided incentives to manage WUAs, cropping patterns, and water fees in response to CC. The results showed that CC has had impacts on rice fields in the KKID, such as mud flooding due to changes in land cover. There are two models employed by the WUAs: a “self-governance model” (SGM) and an “auction model” (AM), the latter of which is a form of management based on “network governance” (NG). The SGM emphasizes the participation of members (community-based) through social capital, while the AM emphasizes the availability of capital in irrigation management (provider-based). More than 77% of WUAs employed the SGM, while the rest employed the AM. In addition, the SGM was utilized for 180 more days per year than the AM, which was used for 47 days per year. Finally, the productivity of the SGM was higher than that of AM. Further research is needed to compare SGM and AM to confirm that SGM is more widely applied than AM.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

carakatani

Publisher

Subject

Agriculture, Biological Sciences & Forestry

Description

Caraka Tani: Journal of Sustainable Agriculture publishes original articles, review articles, case studies and short communications on the fundamentals, applications and management of Sustainable Agriculture areas in collaboration with Indonesian Agrotechnology / Agroecotechnology Association ...