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  • Transboundary Water Resources Conflict Analysis Using Graph Model for Conflict Resolution: A Case Study—Harirud River

    Year: 2021

    Collections: Research Paper

    Topics: Water, Water law, Water Security, Transboundary cooperation, Hydropolitics

    Authors: Abdulsalam Amini, Hamidreza Jafari, Bahram Malekmohammadi, Touraj Nasrabadi

    Countries: Iran Turkmenistan, Afghanistan,

    Source: Discrete Dynamics in Nature and Society

    The present paper aims to analyze, using the Graph Model for Conflict Resolution (GMCR), a game theory model, the conflict between the three countries regarding the utilization of the water resources of the border river, Harirud. To this purpose, first, the current state of the conflict was investigated.


    Bilateral Delimitation of the Caspian Sea and the Exclusion of Third Parties

    Year: 2010

    Collections: Research Paper

    Topics: Water, Water law, Water diplomacy, Transboundary Water Resources, Transboundary cooperation

    Authors: Ilias Bantekas

    Countries:

    Source: The International Journal of Marine and Coastal Law

    This article discusses the position of the littoral States of the body of water known as the Caspian Sea (hereinafter ‘the Caspian’), particularly on the basis of their numerous bilateral treaties and unilateral statements of action, with respect to the legal status and sui generis regimes of the Caspian.


    Risky riparianism: cooperative water governance in Central Asia

    Year: 2009

    Collections: Research Paper

    Topics: Water, IWRM, Transboundary Water Resources, Transboundary cooperation

    Authors: Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario

    Countries:

    Source: Australian Journal of International Affairs

    The article examines the challenges of cooperative management of transboundary water resources in Central Asia. The author analyzes water relations among Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan through Ulrich Beck’s concept of “risk society.” The article argues that water scarcity, the transboundary nature of the Amu Darya and Syr Darya rivers, the Soviet legacy of centralized water management, artificial borders, and ethnic tensions create significant risks for regional stability.


    Legal challenges to the management of transboundary watercourses in Central Asia under the conditions of Eurasian Economic Integration

    Year: 2017

    Collections: Research Paper

    Topics: IWRM, Water law, Water diplomacy, Transboundary Water Resources, Hydropolitics

    Authors: Daria Boklan, Barbara Janusz-Pawletta

    Countries:

    Source: Environmental Earth Sciences

    This article explores the legal challenges of managing transboundary watercourses in Central Asia in the context of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU). The authors analyze whether existing international, regional, and bilateral legal mechanisms are sufficient for regulating shared rivers such as the Syr Darya, Chu, Talas, Irtysh, Ural, and others.


    Water Governance in Central Asia: A Luhmannian Perspective

    Year: 2015

    Collections: Research Paper

    Topics: Water governance, Transboundary Water Resources, Hydropolitics

    Authors: Nodir Djanibekov, Kristof Van Assche, Vladislav Valentinov

    Countries:

    Source: Society & Natural Resources

    The article focuses on the problems of transboundary water governance in Central Asia from the perspective of Niklas Luhmann’s social systems theory. The authors examine why, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, it became difficult to coordinate the use of the water-energy infrastructure of the Amu Darya and Syr Darya rivers. During the Soviet period, water, energy, and agriculture were managed through a centralized system. However, after 1991, each country began to develop its own national policy. This strengthened contradictions between upstream countries, which need water for hydropower production, and downstream countries, which need water for irrigation.


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