Perez, C.Tschinkel, H.2016-04-192016-04-192003AgREN Network Paper no. 1290 85003 676 3238_watershed.pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10919/65301This paper summarises observations based on previous assessments of watershed management projects in developing countries. These observations are based on a review of the activities of seven private and governmental organizations in Guatemala which were promoting watershed management before and after Hurricane Mitch struck Central America in 1998. Also included are short-term reviews of watershed management projects in Bangladesh, Bolivia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, Niger, Peru, Thailand and Uganda. In all of these cases, the authors visited field sites, interviewed project personnel and participant farmers and reviewed project documents and other technical literature. To complement and contrast with their first-hand experience, the authors perused the international literature on watershed management. The paper proposes a framework to prioritise among the long list of possible watershed management activities, and sharpen the intervention focus on those few critical activities and locations capable of yielding a good, long-term payoff for resource users, their communities and the environment.application/pdfen-USParticipatory processesStakeholdersNongovernmental organizations (NGOs)Income generationEcological restorationSustainable developmentLand use planningProgram planningConservation strategyPovertyWatershed managementAccountabilityWatershedImproving watershed management in developing countries: A framework for prioritising sites and practicesArticle - Refereed