Grassroots Cultural Policy for Water Management in Bangladesh

Rural Bangladesh's livelihood depends on water and the existing grassroots policy framework for sustainable water management (conservation and consumption) reflects a cultural unity within a country which is culturally very diverse. Extra-abundance or shortage of water supply is generally viewe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hossain, Amzad, Marinova, Dora
Format: Journal Article
Published: IWA Publishing 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/10636
_version_ 1848747587804332032
author Hossain, Amzad
Marinova, Dora
author_facet Hossain, Amzad
Marinova, Dora
author_sort Hossain, Amzad
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Rural Bangladesh's livelihood depends on water and the existing grassroots policy framework for sustainable water management (conservation and consumption) reflects a cultural unity within a country which is culturally very diverse. Extra-abundance or shortage of water supply is generally viewed as natural; however, prolonged or human caused water deficiency is treated as the retaliation of nature against anthropogenic transgression, which is often attributed to an act of climate change. The mostly uneducated rural people of multi-cultural Bangladesh live a simple lifestyle promoted by the country's inspiring Baul tradition, including water management. The Bauls religiously promote water conservation and are devoted to enhancing public understanding of the role of water. Spirituality can be the basis for sound water management as traditionally prevalent in rural Bangladesh's self-reliant lifestyle. Western culture and development treat water as an economic resource and commodity. Irreverence or ignorance of water related spirituality by modern societies is the fundamental reason for scarcity, pollution, over-extraction, mal-utilisation and aggressive politics of water. Values-driven water management is emphasised as the sustainability breakthrough and an essential requirement for proper development. Based on the Bangladeshi experience, the paper argues for a spirituality oriented educational policy to inform sustainable water management.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T06:51:31Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-10636
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T06:51:31Z
publishDate 2012
publisher IWA Publishing
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-106362019-02-19T05:34:46Z Grassroots Cultural Policy for Water Management in Bangladesh Hossain, Amzad Marinova, Dora Rural Bangladesh's livelihood depends on water and the existing grassroots policy framework for sustainable water management (conservation and consumption) reflects a cultural unity within a country which is culturally very diverse. Extra-abundance or shortage of water supply is generally viewed as natural; however, prolonged or human caused water deficiency is treated as the retaliation of nature against anthropogenic transgression, which is often attributed to an act of climate change. The mostly uneducated rural people of multi-cultural Bangladesh live a simple lifestyle promoted by the country's inspiring Baul tradition, including water management. The Bauls religiously promote water conservation and are devoted to enhancing public understanding of the role of water. Spirituality can be the basis for sound water management as traditionally prevalent in rural Bangladesh's self-reliant lifestyle. Western culture and development treat water as an economic resource and commodity. Irreverence or ignorance of water related spirituality by modern societies is the fundamental reason for scarcity, pollution, over-extraction, mal-utilisation and aggressive politics of water. Values-driven water management is emphasised as the sustainability breakthrough and an essential requirement for proper development. Based on the Bangladeshi experience, the paper argues for a spirituality oriented educational policy to inform sustainable water management. 2012 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/10636 10.2166/wpt.2012.023 IWA Publishing fulltext
spellingShingle Hossain, Amzad
Marinova, Dora
Grassroots Cultural Policy for Water Management in Bangladesh
title Grassroots Cultural Policy for Water Management in Bangladesh
title_full Grassroots Cultural Policy for Water Management in Bangladesh
title_fullStr Grassroots Cultural Policy for Water Management in Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Grassroots Cultural Policy for Water Management in Bangladesh
title_short Grassroots Cultural Policy for Water Management in Bangladesh
title_sort grassroots cultural policy for water management in bangladesh
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/10636