Abstract
The inland river water regulations in India have become complicated by debates over river ownership, environmental sustainability, native aspirations, and industrial growth. This Article argues that such complexities surrounding the river water regulations inform a “state of entanglement” which cannot be addressed without invoking the unique way the Indian state is embedded within Indian society. This Article suggests that public interest litigation and increased participation for stakeholders and the common people may offer an effective mechanism to overcome the obstacles of the entanglement of state and society in India.
First Page
419
Repository Citation
Mia
M.
Rahim,
,
Guy
C.
Charlton,
&
Abhay
Kanwar,
River Water Regulation in India: The Challenges of the Entangled State,
19
U. Pa. Asian L. Rev.
419
(2024).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu/alr/vol19/iss3/2