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Vegetables --- Water requirements --- Water requirements. --- California
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Vegetables --- Water requirements --- California
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water supply --- urban areas --- Transfer of waters --- Water requirements --- drinking water systems --- Fluid mechanics --- Hydraulic engineering --- Pipes --- Maintenance --- Municipal water supply. --- Waterworks.
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Water resources --- Water requirements --- Plant water relations --- water circulation --- Irrigation water --- Irrigation rates --- irrigation systems --- Irrigation equipment --- irrigation methods --- Environmental impact --- Economic analysis --- Water conservation --- Irrigation schemes --- Resource conservation --- Irrigation --- Eau en agriculture --- Eau --- Irrigation, Technique de l' --- Approvisionnement agricole --- Aspect de l'environnement --- Eau - Approvisionnement agricole --- Irrigation - Aspect de l'environnement
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Irrigation farming --- Evapotranspiration --- Crops and water --- Crops and water. --- Evapotranspiration. --- Irrigation farming. --- Great Plains. --- Irrigated agriculture --- Irrigated farming --- Irrigation agriculture --- Agriculture --- Arid regions agriculture --- Irrigation --- Consumptive use --- Water-supply --- Evaporation (Meteorology) --- Plants --- Agrohydrology --- Crop-water relationships --- Water and crops --- Water-crop relationships --- Plant-water relationships --- Water in agriculture --- Transpiration --- Water requirements --- Canada --- West United States
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Governments and developing agencies promote participatory approaches in solving common pool resource problems, such as in the water sector. Two main participatory approaches have been applied separately, namely negotiation and mediation. In this paper the authors apply the Role-Playing Game that is a component of the Companion Modeling approach, a negotiation procedure, and the Cooperative Game Theory (Shapley value and the Nucleolus solution concepts) that can be mirrored as a mediated mechanism to a water allocation problem in the Kat watershed in South Africa. While the absolute results of the two approaches differ, the negotiation and the cooperative game theory provide similar shares of the benefit allocated to the players from various cooperative arrangements. By evaluating the two approaches, the authors provide useful tips for future extension for both the Role-Playing Games and the Cooperative Game Theory applications.
Catchment --- Catchment Management --- Catchments --- Common Property Resource Development --- Domestic Water Consumption --- Environment --- Environmental Economics and Policies --- Flow --- Groundwater --- Industry --- Irrigation --- Lead --- Meters --- Natural Resources --- Rainfall --- Rural Development --- Sanitation and Sewerage --- Storage Capacity --- Surface Water --- Total Water Requirements --- Town Water Supply and Sanitation --- Wastewater Treatment --- Water --- Water and Industry --- Water Conservation --- Water Resources --- Water Rights --- Water Sector --- Water Sources --- Water Supply and Sanitation --- Water Supply and Sanitation Governance and Institutions --- Water Supply and Systems --- Water Use --- Watershed
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Governments and developing agencies promote participatory approaches in solving common pool resource problems, such as in the water sector. Two main participatory approaches have been applied separately, namely negotiation and mediation. In this paper the authors apply the Role-Playing Game that is a component of the Companion Modeling approach, a negotiation procedure, and the Cooperative Game Theory (Shapley value and the Nucleolus solution concepts) that can be mirrored as a mediated mechanism to a water allocation problem in the Kat watershed in South Africa. While the absolute results of the two approaches differ, the negotiation and the cooperative game theory provide similar shares of the benefit allocated to the players from various cooperative arrangements. By evaluating the two approaches, the authors provide useful tips for future extension for both the Role-Playing Games and the Cooperative Game Theory applications.
Catchment --- Catchment Management --- Catchments --- Common Property Resource Development --- Domestic Water Consumption --- Environment --- Environmental Economics and Policies --- Flow --- Groundwater --- Industry --- Irrigation --- Lead --- Meters --- Natural Resources --- Rainfall --- Rural Development --- Sanitation and Sewerage --- Storage Capacity --- Surface Water --- Total Water Requirements --- Town Water Supply and Sanitation --- Wastewater Treatment --- Water --- Water and Industry --- Water Conservation --- Water Resources --- Water Rights --- Water Sector --- Water Sources --- Water Supply and Sanitation --- Water Supply and Sanitation Governance and Institutions --- Water Supply and Systems --- Water Use --- Watershed
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