Litcius/Paper detail

Revealing the Foggara as a Living Irrigation System through an Institutional Analysis: Evidence from Oases in the Algerian Sahara

Salem Idda, Bruno Bonté, Marcel Kuper, Hamidi Mansour

2021International Journal of the Commons29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The foggara in the Algerian Sahara has often been portrayed as a traditional ingenious but immutable irrigation system incapable of keeping up with the radical socioeconomic and environmental transformations of the 20<sup>th</sup> and 21<sup>st</sup> centuries. Yet, oasis populations continue to use a large number of foggaras. The aim of this study was to reveal the importance of institutions in adapting and preserving the living character of foggaras. Adapting the physical infrastructure and the institutions governing the use of contemporary foggaras are key to adapt to change, weaving different threads of tradition and modernity to maintain collective action and keep the foggaras flowing. We show that Ostrom’s design principles are not only an interesting lens to explore the durability of long-standing self-governing irrigation systems, but also, when these principles are challenged, to characterize transformations of the foggara at a time of contested change.

Topics & Concepts

WeavingModernityLiving systemsIrrigationCollective actionInstitutional analysisKey (lock)Action (physics)SociologyPolitical scienceGeographyEcologySocial scienceComputer scienceEngineeringLawComputer securityMechanical engineeringBiologyPoliticsPhysicsQuantum mechanicsWater management and technologiesWater Governance and InfrastructureAfrican Studies and Geopolitics