Negotiating Groundwater Scarcity and Land Insecurity: Rural Livelihood Strategies in Northern Tunisia
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Date
2026-04-20
Date Issued
ISI Journal
Impact factor: 0.9 (Year: 2026)
Citation
Ines Gharbi, Boubaker Dhehibi, Ghada Ferchichi, Wael Toukebri, Fatma Aribi, Mohamed Elloumi. (20/4/2026). Negotiating Groundwater Scarcity and Land Insecurity: Rural Livelihood Strategies in Northern Tunisia. Agrarian South: Journal of Political Economy.
Abstract
Tunisia’s current food dependency highlights deep structural challenges
facing the agricultural sector, which struggles to meet domestic
demand and ensure an exportable surplus. This crisis is especially
acute in irrigated agriculture, despite its central role in regional development.
A key policy challenge lies in integrating irrigated agriculture,
which is dynamic yet shaped by informal and unequal access to land and
water, into a sustainable development framework. This study focuses
on irrigated perimeters in northern Tunisia and examines how farmers
adapt to increasing precarity and negotiate resource scarcity and
climatic variability. Although the hydro-agricultural strategy has contributed
to regional growth, it has failed to ensure long-term sustainability
and now faces structural limits. Overexploited and fragile groundwater resources, growing competition among users, and fragmented governance
threaten its viability. Addressing these challenges requires
stronger regulation, transitioning to new governance models, promoting
alternative agronomic systems, and restructuring agrarian structures
to enhance food security, improve environmental services, and build
system resilience.
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Author(s) ORCID(s)
Dhehibi, Boubaker https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3854-6669

