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Participatory Model Calibration for Improving Resource Management Systems: Case Study of Rainwater Harvesting in an Indian Village

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TLDR
A participatory framework to identify criteria and their weights are used as parameters to develop a quantitative model for evaluating efficiency of each resource management system and can be used to plan other resource management systems in various regions.
Abstract
While planning resource management systems in rural areas, it is important to consider criteria that are specific to the local social conditions. Such criteria might change from one region to another and are hence best identified using a participatory approach. In this work, we propose a participatory framework to identify such criteria and derive their weights. These identified criteria and their weights are used as parameters to develop a quantitative model for evaluating efficiency of each system. Such a model can serve as a support tool for stakeholders to simulate and analyze “what-if” scenarios, evaluate alternatives, and select one which best satisfies their requirements. We use existing systems to test the model by comparing efficiencies evaluated by the model to efficiencies perceived by the stakeholders. The model is calibrated by repeating the process until statistically significant correlation is achieved between evaluated and perceived efficiencies. The novelty of the proposed framework lies in treating efficiencies perceived by the stakeholders as the ground truth since they know these systems well and are their ultimate users. The framework is successfully demonstrated using case study of rainwater harvesting (RWH) systems in an Indian village. The resulting calibrated model can be used to plan new RWH systems in this region and similar regions elsewhere. The framework can be used to plan other resource management systems in various regions.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A participatory framework for developing public participation GIS solutions to improve resource management systems

TL;DR: An easy-to-use mobile and web based, free and open source PP-GIS solution, Watershed GIS, was developed and scored better than the three existing solutions and its usage resulted in substantial reduction of variability in criteria values and thus better ranking of alternatives.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stakeholder Roles and Perspectives on Sedimentation Management in Small-Scale Irrigation Schemes in Ethiopia

TL;DR: In this article, a literature review, participatory rural appraisal, and semi-structured interviews were used to investigate the causes of sedimentation in small-scale irrigation in Ethiopia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sedimentation in small-scale irrigation schemes in Ethiopia: Its sources and management

TL;DR: In this paper , a participatory monitoring program was used to investigate sediment causes and sources, measure the annual sediment load, and monitor desilting campaigns in two small scale irrigation schemes in Ethiopia, Arata-Chufa (100 ha) and Ketar (430 ha).
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Evaluation and prioritization model of green projects according to supply and demand of resources, an integration between systems dynamics and participatory modeling

TL;DR: In this article, a model of systems dynamics for decision-making in the evaluation and prioritization of green projects, based on the dynamics of variables such as the supply and demand of natural water resources and of the soil and likewise, with the participation of the inhabitants through the methodology of participatory modeling.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of Values of Pearson's and Spearman's Correlation Coefficients on the Same Sets of Data

TL;DR: Spearman's rank correlation coecient (RS) as mentioned in this paper is a nonparametric (distribution-free) rank statistic proposed by Charles Spearman as a measure of the strength of the associations between two variables.
Journal ArticleDOI

Testing ecological models: the meaning of validation

TL;DR: The ecological literature reveals considerable confusion about the meaning of validation in the context of simulation models, and disagreements over the mean can only be resolved by establishing a convention.

The use and interpretation of principal component analysis in applied research

TL;DR: In this paper, a number of generalizations of principal components have been made specially in the study of a set of variables in relation to another set known as instrumental variables, and the use of generalized principal components in applied research has been indicated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Position Paper: Modelling with stakeholders

TL;DR: This overview paper looks at the different types of stakeholder modelling, and compares participatory modelling to other frameworks that involve stakeholder participation, and draws some lessons and generalisations.
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