Your search found 8 records
1 1999. Perpetual thirst. Down To Earth, February 28:32-44.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 5106 Record No: H024059)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7.6.3 G584 BAN Record No: H024234)
3 Stockholm Water Company. 1999. Urban stability through integrated water-related management: Abstracts, The 9th Stockholm Water Symposium, 9-12 August 1999. Abstracts of proceedings of the 9th Stockholm Water Symposium. 417p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 628.1 G000 STO Record No: H024785)
4 Agarwal, A.; Narain, S.; Sen, S. (Eds.) 1999. State of India's environment 5: The citizens' fifth report. Part I - National overview. New Delhi, India: Centre for Science and Environment. viii, 440p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 363.7 G635 AGA Record No: H024783)
5 Sharma, P. (Ed.) 1989. Seroepidemiology of human malaria: A multicentric study. New Delhi, India: Malaria Research Centre. viii, 206p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 616.9362 G635 SHA Record No: H025260)
6 Ghosh, S. 2001. Indigenous technology in wastewater recycling: Calcutta case study. In Ragab, R.; Pearce, G.; Kim, J. C.; Nairizi, S.; Hamdy, A. (Eds.), 52nd IEC Meeting of the International Commission on Irrigation and Drainage - International Workshop on Wastewater Reuse Management, Seoul, Korea, 19-20 September 2001. Seoul, Korea: Korean National Committee on Irrigation and Drainage. pp.49-54.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: ICID 631.7.5 G000 RAG Record No: H029344)
7 Guterstam, B. 2003. Reuse of wastewater: Case studies. Unpublished report. 9p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 6480 Record No: H032785)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H047964)
(1.84 MB)
International rivers are conventionally understood as watercourses that cross national boundaries, while borders themselves are taken to be static and given – passive features over and across which riparian processes unfold. Employing such straightforward framings of international rivers and borders, academic studies and policy analyses of transboundary water governance perpetuate problematic ideas about the relevant scales and actors involved in international river conflicts and crises. Through a historical examination of the Ganges River and the Indo-Bangladeshi border, I introduce the ‘river-border complex’ as a new framework for reconceptualizing international rivers and borders as synergistic, co-constitutive and interdependent.
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