Resistance of Local Actors to the Leasing of Water Supply in the Village of Atchannou in South-West Benin
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Abstract
Leasing as an innovation in the governance of the Village Water Supply System
(VWSS) should, a priori, allow local authorities to manage the delivery of drinking
water to rural populations in Benin rationally and transparently. However, instead
of being favourably welcomed, this system has met with resistance from local
actors. Based on the premise that leasing involves issues that are insufficiently
elucidated by its innovators, this article analyses the causes of the resistance
observed in its implementation. To achieve this goal, a qualitative social science
research method was used, favouring discussion with 18 participants. The data
were analysed in the backdrop of the market mode of local governance and fuzzy
set theory. The results of this research show that the populations of Atchannou
Village do not fully accept the leasing of water, or at least they set out the
preconditions to be met by the local government authorities before this innovative
approach to governance of the water point can become operational: guaranteeing
the management of the funds from the sale of water (1), and repaying the debts
related to the community management of the water supply (2). The local actors are
therefore in a logic of preserving the interests that will be generated by the sale of
water, which is now retroceded to the Municipality; this further increase their
resistance to the leasing of the water supply system.
