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Center for Natural Resources and Sustainability DKU

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Topic: Transboundary Water Resources

  • Water
  • Climate
  • Energy
  • Agriculture
  • Eco business
  • Sustainable Development
  • Irrigation
  • Renewable energy
  • Gender
  • IWRM
  • NEXUS
  • Green business
  • Water law
  • Transportation and logistics
  • Management
  • Water governance
  • Water diplomacy
  • Transboundary Water Resources
  • Water Security
  • Transboundary cooperation
  • Hydropower
  • Hydropolitics
  • River Basin Organizations in Water Diplomacy

    Year: 2020

    Collections: Books

    Topics: Water, Sustainable Development, Irrigation, IWRM, NEXUS, Water law, Water governance, Water diplomacy, Transboundary Water Resources, Water Security

    Authors: Anoulak Kittikhoun, Susanne Schmeier

    Countries:

    Source: Routledge

    River Basin Organizations in Water Diplomacy explores the role of River Basin Organizations (RBOs) in preventing and resolving conflicts related to transboundary water resources. Through a comparative analysis of international river basins, the book examines how institutional mechanisms, legal frameworks, and diplomatic tools promote cooperation among states and support the sustainable management of shared water resources.


    Water Diplomacy as an approach to regional cooperation in South Asia: A case from the Brahmaputra Basin

    Year: 2018

    Collections: Scientific Publications

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

    Authors: Anamika Barua

    Countries:

    Source: Journal of Hydrology

    The article examines challenges of transboundary water cooperation in the Brahmaputra River Basin shared by Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, and India. It highlights the lack of trust, information asymmetries, and absence of a regional governance framework that hinder cooperation. The authors emphasize the importance of inclusive, multi-stakeholder water diplomacy and informal dialogues as a foundation for sustainable and equitable basin-wide cooperation.


    Negotiating Water across Levels: A Peace and Conflict “Toolbox” for Water Diplomacy

    Year: 2018

    Collections:

    Topics: Water, Water law, Water governance, Water diplomacy, Transboundary Water Resources, Water Security

    Authors: Charlotte Grech-Madin, Stefan Döring, Kyungmee Kim, Ashok Swain

    Countries:

    Source: Journal of Hydrology

    This article explores how water diplomacy can be strengthened through multi-level governance approaches. Drawing on peace and conflict research, it highlights the importance of political norms, stakeholder engagement, and local-level data in improving cooperation over shared water resources and enhancing the effectiveness of water diplomacy.


    Water Diplomacy: The Intersect of Science, Policy and Practice

    Year: 2019

    Collections:

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

    Authors: Martina Klimes, David Michel, Elizabeth Yaari, Phillia Restiani

    Countries:

    Source: Journal of Hydrology

    Why water diplomacy? What does diplomacy have to do with water? Is cooperation over transboundary surface and ground waters the exclusive domain of diplomats and foreign policy experts? Or mainly the purview of water professionals negotiating agreements on shared water resources? Why should non-governmental stakeholders be involved in transboundary water dialogues? These questions lie at the heart of debates and dialogues around the theory and practice of water diplomacy.


    Informal water diplomacy and power: A case of seeking water security in the Mekong River basin

    Year: 2020

    Collections:

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

    Authors: Naho Mirumachi

    Countries:

    Source: Environmental Science and Policy

    Water diplomacy is regarded as a means to prevent conflict and to enhance peace through the cooperative management of transboundary water resources. There have been calls for water diplomacy to be given further attention, especially by foreign policy and security specialists, and to be extended to non-state actors through informal dialogue processes. The paper critically questions the qualitative changes water diplomacy delivers and argues for further analytical scrutiny on its efficacy. Using a critical hydropolitics perspective, the paper advances understanding of the way power asymmetries presiding over contested waters are altered or maintained, particularly through informal diplomacy.


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