Your search found 3 records
1 Wolf, A. T. 1996. Middle East water conflicts and directions for conflict resolution. Washington, DC, USA: IFPRI. vi, 28p. (Food, agriculture, and the environment discussion paper 12)
Water resources ; Water allocation ; International cooperation ; Conflict ; Water policy ; Watersheds ; Water law ; Equity ; Economic aspects / Middle East / Dead Sea / Nile River / Jordan Basin / Tigris-Euphrates Basin
(Location: IWMI-SA Call no: 333.91 GG30 WOL Record No: H018473)

2 Gardner-Outlaw, T.; Engelman, R. 1997. Sustaining water, easing scarcity: A second update. Washington, DC, USA: Population Action International. 20p.
Water scarcity ; Water stress ; Water availability ; Population growth ; Statistics / Africa / Southern Africa / Namibia / Botswana / Egypt / Tigris-Euphrates Basin / Nile River Basin
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 4677 Record No: H021849)

3 Shahbaznezhadfard, M.; Yousef, S. 2022. Development of a dynamics-based model for analyzing strategic water–environmental conflicts: systems thinking instead of linear thinking. Water Policy, 24(1):83-100. [doi: https://doi.org/10.2166/wp.2021.145]
Transboundary waters ; Environmental factors ; Conflicts ; International cooperation ; River basins ; Game theory ; Modelling ; Strategies ; Sustainable development ; Political aspects ; Decision making / Middle East / Turkey / Syrian Arab Republic / Iraq / Tigris-Euphrates Basin
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H050894)
https://iwaponline.com/wp/article-pdf/24/1/83/997634/024010083.pdf
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H050894.pdf
(0.56 MB) (568 KB)
A new evolution in graph modeling for conflict resolution (GMCR), a robust methodology for conflict resolution, is presented in this research to incorporate the systems thinking concept into the conventional paradigm of GMCR so that the dynamic nature of water–environmental conflicts can be modeled, and better outcomes obtained. To achieve this objective, a methodology is developed in three phases: static, dynamic, and outcome-based analyses. To develop the methodology, the Tigris–Euphrates basin conflict in the Middle East over the past 30 years, as a real-life case study, is used to show the robustness and capabilities of the proposed approach. Finally, a sustainable resolution to the current conflict is proposed, and the results are discussed. The proposed methodology benefits from improving the existing and often static-based conflict resolution developments by considering the dynamic nature so that the true root causes of complex conflicts are addressed, better strategic insights achieved, and comprehensive resolution provided.

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