Challenges of post-war policy reforms in Lebanon's water sector - Lessons learned
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IWA Publishing
Abstract
Lebanon has not been able to properly develop and benefit from its water sources. A confessional system of governance has hindered development of the sector. Laws and regulations have been developed erratically with many superseding others without the superseded laws being erased from the registry. This created a chaotic regulatory and legal environment with overlapping jurisdictions and no clear accountability mechanisms. The period before the onset of the civil war in 1975 witnessed significant progress of both infrastructure and laws and regulations related to the management of the water sector. The civil war destroyed the water sector infrastructure and emptied all regulatory control of the resources. The period of reconstruction between 1990 and 1999 witnessed the promulgation of ambitious reconstruction plans for the water sector with funding reliant on borrowing from local and external debtors. Post 1999, government reforms started creeping into the system but were often donor driven and still suffered from the same mistakes of laws overlain on top of existing laws without erasing the older material. Critically, the management of the sector is not inclusive and the beneficiaries of water services are often not heard and ignored. © 2021 The Authors
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Keywords
Policy frameworks, Post-war lebanon, Regional water establishments (rwes), Water law, Water reform, Lebanon, Waterworks, Drinking water, River water, Civil war, Laws and regulations, Policy framework, Policy reforms, Regional water establishment, Water laws, Water reforms, Water sector, Accountability, Government, Infrastructure planning, Policy making, Post-war, Reform process, Water planning, Article, Climate change, Energy, Environmental policy, Environmental sanitation, Human, Law, Public policy, War, Water management, Water supply, Laws and legislation