Analysis of Social Networks of Water-Use-Related Information in the Rio Mayo Irrigation District (038) in Northern Mexico: Ethnicity, Land Tenure and Land Use

Author:

Rivera-Nuñez Ixtoc1,Luque Agraz Diana1,Murphy Arthur2,Jones Eric3

Affiliation:

1. Centro de Investigación en Alimentación y Desarrollo A.C., Hermosillo 83304, Sonora, Mexico

2. Department of Anthropology, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Greensboro, NC 27402, USA

3. School of Public Health, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, TX 77030, USA

Abstract

(1) Background: In Mexico, 76% of water consumed is used for crop irrigation, and close to half of this is used in 86 irrigation districts for agroindustry throughout the nation. The present study combines a political ecology approach with social networks analysis to identify how water-use-related information networks are structured according to the ethnicity (indigenous and non-indigenous) of the users of the Rio Mayo Irrigation District 038 (RMID) and how these networks are influenced by users’ type of land tenure and land use. (2) Methods: The study involved three stages: identification of social actors that influence water management (SAIWM); application of 118 structured interviews with users of RMID; and ethnographic fieldwork. (3) Results: Thirty SAIWM were identified. Only 11.8% of RMID users interviewed were indigenous farmers and only 5% were indigenous holders of collective landholdings. The information network metrics indicate that indigenous users have less access to information than non-indigenous users. (4) Conclusions: Ethnicity as well as land tenure and land use influence the structure of information networks and determine whether RMID users work as land-holding farmers or as hired labor.

Funder

National Observatory for Socio-Ecological Sustainability

Biophilia Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Geography, Planning and Development,Biochemistry

Reference71 articles.

1. World Economic Forum (2021). The Global Risks Report 2021, World Economic Forum. [16th ed.].

2. United Nations (2021). The United Nations World Water Development Report 2021: Valuing Water, UNESCO.

3. CONAGUA (2020). Programa Nacional Hídrico (PNH) 2020–2024, Comisión Nacional del Agua.

4. SINA (2022, December 08). Distritos y Unidades de Riego (Nacional). Conagua. Available online: http://sina.conagua.gob.mx/sina/tema.php?tema=distritosriego&ver=reporte&o=1&n=nacional.

5. Boege, E. (2008). El Patrimonio Biocultural de los Pueblos Indígenas de México, Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia.

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