Image

Knowledge space

Center for Natural Resources and Sustainability DKU

DKU Logo
UNESCO Logo

Collections: All publications

  • Manuals
  • Scientific Publications
  • Conferences
  • Books
  • Policy Briefs
  • Video
  • Reports
  • Synopsis
  • Working paper
  • Research Paper
  • Opinion Paper
  • Short Communications
  • Review article
  • Concept paper
  • Technical note
  • Anchoring water diplomacy – The legal nature of international river basin organizations

    Year: 2018

    Collections: Scientific Publications, Review article

    Topics: Water, Water diplomacy

    Authors: Susanne Schmeier, Zaki Shubber

    Countries:

    Source: Journal of Hydrology

    Water diplomacy needs institutional anchoring. International River Basin Organizations (RBOs) – being the result of diplomatic efforts by riparian states intending to create a framework for cooperation between themselves over shared water bodies – can provide such institutional anchors. RBOs ensure that agreements to cooperate are turned into a long-term commitment by riparian states to jointly manage shared water resources and, in turn, foster mutually beneficial cooperation over time. RBOs have been the subject of detailed examinations of their conceptual core, of their manifold functions, of their effectiveness in achieving their goals and so forth. However, the legal nature of these entities has so far received limited attention notwithstanding its significance in empowering RBOs to act as institutional anchors for water diplomacy.


    Emotions in Water Diplomacy: Negotiations on the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam

    Year: 2023

    Collections: Scientific Publications, Review article

    Topics: Water, Water diplomacy

    Authors: Wondwosen Michago Seide, Emanuele Fantini

    Countries:

    Source: Water Alternatives 16(3): 912-929

    This paper aims to foreground the importance of emotions in water diplomacy in general and in Nile water diplomacy in particular. Water diplomacy does not operate from a clean slate, but in a socio-hydropolitically mediated context which is, in turn, imbued with emotions. The existing water diplomacy approach primarily operates with the assumption that the riparian state is a rational actor. However, we argue that emotions have underpinned water diplomacy, including the ongoing Nile negotiations. These emotions are neither acknowledged nor negotiated but are dismissed as irrationality in both the theoretical understanding and practice of water diplomacy.


    Diving into Water Diplomacy – Exploring the Emergence of a Concept

    Year: 2022

    Collections: Scientific Publications, Review article

    Topics: Water, Water governance Water diplomacy,

    Authors: Bota Sharipova, Susanne Schmeier, Rozemarijn ter Horst, Alyssa Offutt, Jenniver Sehring

    Countries:

    Source: Diplomatica, 4(2), 200-221

    Based on a review of academic and policy documents, we analyze the variety of understandings and common patterns in the definition of water diplomacy. We also analyze tools, tracks, and levels through which and at which water diplomacy is conducted or analyzed.


    Gender Dynamics in Transboundary Water Governance: Feminist Perspectives on Water Conflict and Cooperation

    Year: 2023

    Collections: Scientific Publications, Books

    Topics: Water, Gender, Water governance Water diplomacy,

    Authors: Rozemarijn ter Horst, Jenniver Sehring, Margreet Zwarteveen

    Countries:

    Source: Routledge. Taylor & Francis

    This volume assesses the nexus of gender and transboundary water governance, containing empirical case studies, discourse analyses, practitioners’ accounts, and theoretical refections.


    Water diplomacy: A man’s world? Insights from the Nile, Rhine and Chu-Talas basins

    Year: 2023

    Collections: Scientific Publications, Review article

    Topics: Water, Water governance Water diplomacy,

    Authors: Rozemarijn ter Horst, Jenniver Sehring, Alexandra Said

    Countries:

    Source: Journal of Hydrology X

    Based on Feminist Institutionalism, this paper analyses the reasons for gender disbalance in water diplomacy. To this end, it looks at three intergovernmental decision-making forums on shared waters, namely the Nile Technical Advisory Committee, the Chu-Talas Water Commission, and the International Commission for the Protection of the Rhine. The perceived key obstacles for women’s access to decision-making positions were disciplinary gender divides that go along with a largely technical approach to water management, the gender division of labour, cultural norms, and perceptions of good leadership. While their relevance differed in the different socioeconomic, political and cultural contexts, the overall results show that male dominance in water diplomacy is not only a matter of numerical representation, but enshrined in professional norms and practices.


    For questions about cooperation, please contact us at:

    Join us on social networks: