- Resource System
- Watershed and associated topography
- Resource Units
- Freshwater for irrigation
- Location
- Phey and Phyang villages, India
The villages of Phyang and Phey are located northwest and southwest from the town of Leh in the Ladakh division of the Jammu and Kashmir districts, India, and are upstream (Phyang) and downstream (Phey) from each other. Each village encompasses an unknown geographical area of land located in a cold desert/high altitude region characterized by glaciers, snowfields, short cultivation periods, and scarce water resources. The case study involves an undetermined snapshot in time and catalogues an action situation involving an unknown number of households in each village which are dependent on an earthen channel irrigation system to divert water from melting snow and glaciers to their fields. The two villages share the same source of water draining into a common tokpo (stream) and are, therefore, grouped into one system of intra-village common-pool resource management. Water is the main resource and the irrigation canal is the public infrastructure that requires regular maintenance.
The original case study authors focused on the impact of globalization on the traditional CPR governance of this irrigation system. The case study has subsequently been used in comparative analyses regarding Ostrom's Design Principles (see bibliography).
Brady U, Arizona State University.
At the Crossroads: Continuity and Change in the Traditional Irrigation Practices of Ladakh. 9th Biennial Conference.
. 2002.A Review of Design Principles for Community-based Natural Resource Management. Ecology and Society. 15(4):38.
. 2010.Explaining success and failure in the commons: the configural nature of Ostrom’s institutional design principles. International Journal of the Commons. 10(2):417–439.
. 2016.