This book presents findings of field research on water and land reforms
in a commercial farming area in the Olifants basin, South Africa.
Emphasis is put on analyzing the situation on the ground, assuming that
actual allocation and distribution of water is taking place by water
users, and assuming that with redistribution of land also re-allocation
of water takes place. Knowing that white farmers are in control of water
resources, the objective was to study how they anticipated water - and
land reforms. This book presents water control as a sociotechnical
system, embedded in local land and water rights, and use practices, and
enmeshed in white farmers' livelihoods, values and ideals. Main findings
are that white farmers employed strategies to secure and claim water
resources in three domains of policy intervention, i.e. water reforms;
registration and billing of water use and Water User Associations; land
redistribution; and land rights restitution. The work encourages
thinking on water reforms practices. Its conclusions are relevant for
researchers, practitioners and policy makers who work on water reforms,
in particular in South Africa.