Summary: | The intentional recharge and use of aquifers for drinking, domestic use and irrigation is one of the most
elaborate community initiatives in groundwater governance. Communities deal with difficult waters like flash floods
and runoff for short periods, and for more prolonged periods with dry spells that prompt frugality in water use.
These collective systems have been challenged in recent decades by the massive development of individual
boreholes; these have emerged in connection with intensive groundwater-based agriculture and have led to
unsustainable groundwater exploitation. This article analyses how communities have been confronted with, and
have resisted, such challenges in recent times. It focuses on two long-standing and functional community aquifer
recharge and use systems, one in Algeria (M’Zab Valley) and the other in India (Randullabad, in the state of
Maharashtra). We show that sharing such difficult waters requires, first, practice-based and shared knowledge of
the complex interactions between the surface and groundwater that is collectively owned by the community;
second, robust collective action to maintain and operate the common infrastructure that is undergoing continuous
adaptation to the particular socionatural conditions of a specific area; and, third, adaptive institutions to carefully
balance available water resources and their frugal use. Our analysis shows that community governance of
groundwater is embedded in social norms and meanings and that these are expressed in the frugal use of scarce
resources and/or the continuous challenging of irresponsible water use when it threatens domestic water supply.
These community initiatives can represent sources of inspiration for ecologically sustainable and socially equitable
forms of groundwater governance, even in very challenging situations.
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