1. Assessing the Importance of Water Infrastructure and Institutions for Water Security2. Why India Needs Large Water Resource Projects Involving Inter-basin Water Transfers3. Recent Droughts in India: Nature's Fury or Poor Statecraft?4. A Critique of Mihir Shah Committee (2016) Report on Water Reforms in India5. Does Hard Evidence Matter in Policy Making? The Case of Climate Change and Changing Land Use6. Mission Kakatiya for Rejuvenating Tanks in Telangana: Making it a Mission Possible7. Irrigation Miracle in Madhya Pradesh: What has worked?8. Thanking 'Rainwater Harvesting' and Blaming the Rain God: The Case of Chennai Floods9. Adapting to Climate Variability and Reducing Carbon Emissions: Strategies that Work for India10. Canal Irrigation vs Well Irrigation: Comparing the Un-comparable11. Green Revolution vs 'Dream Revolution': Agricultural Growth and Poverty Reduction in Eastern India12. Deciding the Types of Interventions for Agricultural Development in different agro ecologies13. Impacts of Micro Irrigation Systems: Perception vs Reality14. Implications of Rising Demand for Dairy Products on Agricultural Water Use in India15. How Do We Promote Adoption of Improved Latrines in India? Findings of a Study from Rural Andhra Pradesh
Dr Dinesh Kumar is the Executive Director of the Institute for Resource Analysis and Policy in Hyderabad, an Indian think-tank on water management founded by him in 2008. He holds a degree in Civil Engineering (focus on water resources management) and a Ph. D in Water Management. He works on water, agriculture, and energy related issues in India and internationally, heading several research and consultancy projects and training assignments of the organization. He is the author of nearly 300 research publications, including nine academic books, nine edited volumes, and several international, peer-reviewed journal articles. He is on the editorial board of four prestigious international journals, Viz., Water Policy, International Journal of Water Resources Development, PLOS Water journal and Frontiers in Water. In a career spanning 30 years, Kumar has visited 21 countries, for conferences and official work.