Abstract:
The research project described in this paper is conducted in the Allai Extension Scheme
in Trincomalee district. In this scheme, covering some 7,000 hectares in its present form,
farmers from Sinhala, Tamil and Muslim background have been living together since the
1950s. During the conflict that has ravaged much of North-East Sri Lanka, the villages in
the scheme have seen extensive death and destruction. However, despite all this, the
relevant government agencies and the farmers have managed to keep the irrigation
system functioning to a reasonable extent.
The central objective of this study is to gain insight into how the actors involved
managed to keep large-scale irrigation schemes in Sri Lanka functioning to a reasonable
extent during the conflict, and into what the consequences of the possible return of
peace will be for the relationships between the different stakeholders.
A more theoretical perspective underlying the study is on conflict and co-operation
between non-combatants in situations of violent (intra-state, ‘ethnic’) conflict. In much of
the research done on violent conflicts, non-combatants receive relatively little attention. If
they do, they are often treated as either a pretty non-distinct support base, or as victims
(refugees, traumatised people, raped women). I have found virtually no literature on how
non-combatants identified with opposing groups of combatants deal with each other.
The research is mainly qualitative in nature, primarily consisting of informal interviews,
with some quantitative analysis where required to support the thesis.