Your search found 15 records
1 Giordano, Mark; Lautze, J. 2008. Using the seemingly uninteresting African transboundary water law database to derive surprisingly interesting water policy lessons. In Humphreys, E.; Bayot, R. S.; van Brakel, M.; Gichuki, F.; Svendsen, M.; Wester, P.; Huber-Lee, A.; Cook, S. Douthwaite, B.; Hoanh, Chu Thai; Johnson, N.; Nguyen-Khoa, Sophie; Vidal, A.; MacIntyre, I.; MacIntyre, R. (Eds.). Fighting poverty through sustainable water use: proceedings of the CGIAR Challenge Program on Water and Food, 2nd International Forum on Water and Food, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 10-14 November 2008. Vol.1. Keynotes; Cross-cutting topics. Colombo, Sri Lanka: CGIAR Challenge Program on Water and Food. pp.11-15.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G000 HUM Record No: H041768)
2 Giordano, Mark. 2008. International water security: domestic threats and opportunities by Nakayama et al (Eds.). Book review. Water Alternatives, 1(2):292-293.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H041840)
(0.13 MB)
3 Kindler, J. 2009. Ethics and uncertainty in integrated water resources management with special reference to transboundary issues. In Llamas, M. R.; Martinez-Cortina, L.; Mukherji, Aditi. (Eds.). Water ethics: Marcelino Botin Water Forum 2007. Leiden, Netherlands: CRC Press. pp.69-79.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 333.91 G000 LLA Record No: H042073)
4 Ballabh, V. (Ed.) 2008. Governance of water: institutional alternatives and political economy. New Delhi, India: SAGE Publications. 386p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 333.91 G635 BAL Record No: H042114)
This book makes an effort to initiate the discourse of governance of water in the Indian context from a variety of angles, such as neo-classical and institutional economics, deliberative democracy, public administration, collective action and political economy perspectives. Reform in water governance not only includes a re-orientation of policy priorities and approaches, but also the restructuring of the institutional framework away from the state and village dichotomy. New ‘intermediate’ institutions are required to allow a negotiated approach to water resource governance, multi-stakeholder participation, and integrated water resource management at various levels: the village, state, and nation as a whole.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H042156)
(0.35 MB)
6 Chartres, Colin. (Ed.) 2009. Words into action: delegate publication for the 5th World Water Forum, Istanbul, Turkey, 16-22 March 2009. London, UK: Faircount Media Group. 148p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G000 CHA Record No: H042181)
7 Dukhovny, V.; Ziganshina, D. 2009. The challenges of transboundary water resource management in Central Asia. In Chartres, Colin (Ed.). Words into action: delegate publication for the 5th World Water Forum, Istanbul, Turkey, 16-22 March 2009. London, UK: Faircount Media Group. pp.72-76.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 333.9162 G635 SAL Record No: H042187)
8 Sadoff, C.; Yu, W. H. 2009. Benefit sharing in water management and development: a tool for growth and equity. In Chartres, Colin (Ed.). Words into action: delegate publication for the 5th World Water Forum, Istanbul, Turkey, 16-22 March 2009. London, UK: Faircount Media Group. pp.92-96.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 333.9162 G635 SAL Record No: H042191)
(0.72 MB)
9 Chartres, Colin. (Ed.) 2009. Words into action: delegate publication for the 5th World Water Forum, Istanbul, Turkey, 16-22 March 2009. London, UK: Faircount Media Group. 148p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: IWMI 333.91 G000 CHA c2 Record No: H042199)
10 Yellow River Conservancy Commission. 2003. Proceedings, 1st International Yellow River Forum on River Basin Management. Volume IV. Zhengzhou, China: The Yellow River Conservancy Publishing House. 483p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G592 YEL Record No: H034786)
11 Yellow River Conservancy Commission. 2003. Proceedings, 1st International Yellow River Forum on River Basin Management. Volume IV. Zhengzhou, China: The Yellow River Conservancy Publishing House. 483p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G592 YEL c2 Record No: H034787)
12 Babel, M. S.; Wahid, S. M. 2009. Freshwater under threat, South East Asia: vulnerability assessment of freshwater resources to environmental change, Mekong River Basin. Nairobi, Kenya: UNEP. 31p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H034801)
(4.44 MB)
13 Moreyra, A. 2009. Multiple territories in dispute: water policies, participation and Mapuce indigenous rights in Patagonia, Argentina. Thesis. Wageningen, Netherlands: Wageningen University. 218p.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 333.91 G510 MOR Record No: H042986)
(0.34 MB)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H043145)
(0.90 MB)
During the time of the Soviet Union, the Central Asian states managed their water resources on the meso level according to administrative rather than hydrological boundaries. It was only in 2003 that Uzbekistan shifted from administrative to hydrological boundaries for water management. Using the example of Khorezm Province in the lower Amu Darya basin, this paper shows that redefining boundaries is a political process, which led in Khorezm to new boundaries which are partly determined by hydraulic, not hydrological, and political considerations. Nevertheless, the new management approach has created more equity amongst the different districts in terms of water supply per irrigated area. However, simple equity in water supply did not take into consideration other issues, such as infrastructure, hydrogeological zones and crop production. In addition, the official data show that the achieved equity was based on an overall increase in water supply to the individual districts and to Khorezm as a whole. When only the increase in water supply to the individual districts is taken into consideration, it appears that the location of the main office and the regional provenance of the main staff influenced water supply to specific districts. Finally, based on the data presented for Khorezm Province the paper goes a stage further and questions the real value of the new water management boundaries implemented in Khorezm.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H046525)
(0.21 MB)
The changing notion of state territoriality highlights overlapping power structures at international, national, and local scales and reveals how states can be “differently” powerful. This article analyzes how the interplay of these power structures shapes the dynamics of natural resource management in one of the world’s fastest changing transboundary basins, the Mekong. Taking the Lao People’s Democratic Republic as a case study, we highlight the existing inconsistency and institutional discrepancies in land, water, and environmental policy related to hydropower and illustrate how they are manifested in multiple decision-making frameworks and overlapping legal orders. The resulting legal plurality reveals the inherently contested terrain of hydropower but, more important, it illustrates how the central state has been able to use contradictory mandates and interests to further its goals. The specific Mekong hydropower case demonstrates that an understanding of power geometries and scale dynamics is crucial to meaningful application of social and environmental safeguards for sustainable dam development.More broadly, the case sheds light on the important role of states’ various agents and their multiple connections, partially explaining how the achievement of the central state’s goals can be derived from legal plurality rather than hindered by it.
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