Supervisor of e-Publishing and MArketing Services

  « Exit from preview

Freshwater Resources and Interstate Cooperation:Strategies to Mitigate an Environmental Risk

SUNY Press

 View book pages:
» About this Book
    FRESHWATER RESOURCES AND INTERSTATE COOPERATION
    Contents
    Preface
    Acknowledgments
    Abbreviations
    1. Introduction
    2. Overview of Explanatory Theories for Interpreting Interstate Water Accords
    3. A Quantitative Assessment of Interstate Water Accords,1950–1999
    4. Comparative Case Study Introduction and Case Study Number One(Low Level of Cooperation)
    5. Case Study Number Two:Lesotho Highlands Water Accords(Medium Level of Cooperation)
    6. The 1994 Convention on Cooperation for the Protectionand Sustainable Use of the River Danube(High Level of Cooperation)
    7. Conclusion
    Appendix A. Tables
    Appendix B. Figures
    Appendix C. Maps
    Notes
    References
 
+
Index
    Page 
 

 Buy this book:
  SUNY Press
  




 Freshwater Resources and Interstate Cooperation:Strategies to Mitigate an Environmental Risk
by Frederick D. Gordon
    Feedback  Available purchase options     AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Bibliographic information

TitleFreshwater Resources and Interstate Cooperation:Strategies to Mitigate an Environmental Risk
AuthorFrederick D. Gordon
PublisherSUNY Press
Publication Date10/22/08
SubjectEnvironmental Politics,International Environmental Studies,International Relations
Pages187


Description 

Examines state cooperation over increasingly scarce water resources.

Reports from the United Nations suggest that as much as forty percent of the global population could be without adequate freshwater supplies by 2015, leading some experts to predict that future wars will be fought over water rather than oil. Yet to date, most nation-states have been able to develop viable freshwater agreements to share this precious resource. Frederick D. Gordon examines how effective these accords are in sharing and redistributing water and whether they are sufficient to meet the increasing threat of water scarcity. Using an innovative ranking system, he assesses the significance of cooperation within both bilateral and multilateral accords, including the Israeli-Palestinian Interim Accords of 1993–1995, the Lesotho Highlands Water Treaty of 1986, and the 1994 Convention on Cooperation for the Protection and Sustainable Use of the River Danube. Gordon identifies central factors and stakeholders that are necessary for mitigating the risk of conflict and presents a template for understanding how state behavior can manage and sustain regional water resources.



About the Author 

Frederick D. Gordon ---

Frederick D. Gordon teaches Environmental Law and Policy at California Lutheran University.




Reviews 

"This book addresses a compelling problem for humanity in the twenty-first century and will be valuable for graduate classes and the international water policy community like World Bank analysts." - John M. Whiteley, University of California at Irvine



 Special Access Code:

 Already viewed books:
Freshwater Resources and Interstate Cooperation:Strategies to Mitigate an Environmental RiskFreshwater Resources and Interstate Cooperation:Strategies to Mitigate an Environmental Risk