Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-09T02:39:55.580Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 August 2010

Jerome Delli Priscoli
Affiliation:
U.S. Army Engineer Institute for Water Resources
Aaron T. Wolf
Affiliation:
Oregon State University
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abu-Nimer, M. (1996). Conflict resolution in an Islamic context. Peace and Change, 21(1), 22–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, A. (2000). River Senegal: Flood management and the future of the valley. Drylands Issue Paper (E93), International Institute for Environment and Development.
Adams, R. M. (1974). The evolution of urban society, In Man and water: Social sciences and management of water resources, edited by James, L. D.. Lexington: Lexington University Press, p. 43.Google Scholar
Africa News. (2004). Lesotho: Phase I of Highlands Water Project now fully operational. March 16.
Africa News. (2006). South Africa: Top Lesotho water boss charged. February 12.
Agrarian Research and Training Institute (ARTI). (1986). Proceedings of a Workshop on Water Management in Sri Lanka, 8th ed., edited by Abeyratne, S., Ganewatte, P., and Merrey, D. J., ARTI documentation series No. 10. Colombo, Sri Lanka: ARTI.Google Scholar
Agrawal, A. (2002). Common resources and institutional sustainability. In The drama of the commons, edited by Ostrom, E., Dietz, T., Dolšak, N., Stern, P. C., Stonich, S., and Weber, E. U.. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, pp. 41–86.Google Scholar
Agrawal, A., and Gibson, C. C. (1999). Communities and natural resources: Beyond enchantment and disenchantment. World Development, 27(4), 629–641.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alam, U. (2002). Questioning the water wars rational: A case study of the Indus Waters Treaty. Geographical Journal, 168(4), 354–364.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alearts, G. J. (1999). The role of external support agencies. River Basin Management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop, The Hague, October 27–29, 1999, edited by Mostert, E., Beek, E., Bouman, N. W. M., Hey, E., Savenije, H. H. G., and Thissen, W. A. H.. IHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31, Paris: UNESCO.Google Scholar
Alearts, G. J. (2001). Institutions for river basin management: The role of external support agencies in developing countries. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
Alearts, G., and LeMoigne, G. (editors). (2002). Integrated water management at river basin level: An institutional development perspective. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
Allan, J. A., (editor). (1996). Water, peace and the Middle East: Negotiating resources in the Jordan basin, 19th ed. London and New York: Tauris Academic Studies; St. Martin's [distributor].Google Scholar
Allan, J. A. (1998a). “Virtual water”: An essential element in stabilizing the political economies of the Middle East. In Transformations of Middle Eastern natural environments: Legacies and lessons, edited by Albert, J., Bernhardsson, M., and Kenna, R.. Bulletin Series No. 103, November (9). New Haven: Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, pp. 141–149.Google Scholar
Allan, J. A. (1998b). Water resources, prevention of violent conflict and the cohorence of EU policies in the Horn of Africa. Discussion paper, London: SOAS and Saferworld.Google Scholar
Allan, J. A. (2001). The Middle East water question: hydro-politics and the global economy. London: I B Tauris.Google Scholar
Allan, J. A. (2002). Hydro-peace in the Middle East: Why no water wars? A case study of the Jordan River basin. SAIS Review, 22(2, Summer/Fall), 255–272.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allee, D. J., and Abdalla, C. W. (1989). Policy education to build local capacity to manage the risk of groundwater contamination. A. E. Staff Report 89-29 (August), Development of Agricultural Economics, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, pp. 2B.31–2B.40.Google Scholar
Allouche, J. (2005).Water nationalism: An explanation of the past and present conflicts in Central Asia, the Middle East, and the Indian Subcontinent? Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Universite de Geneve.
Ambroise-Rendu, Marc (1992). Le Monde, February 16–17.Google Scholar
American Academy of Arts and Sciences. (1994). Introduction. Bulletin, 48(2, November). pp. 1–4.
American University Trade and Environment Database. (1999). Hydrovia Canal plan and environment. Available online at http://www.american.edu/TED/hidrovia.htm.
American University Trade and Environment Database (2004). Itaipu Dam. Available online at http://www.american.edu/TED/itaipu.htm.
Amery, H. A. (2001). Islamic water management. Water International, 26(4, December), 481–489.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amery, H. A. (2002). Water wars in the Middle East: A looming threat. Geographical Journal, 168(4), 313–323.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amery, H., and Wolf, A. (editors). (2000). Water in the Middle East: A geography of peace. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Amy, D. (1987). The politics of environmental mediation. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Anand, P. B. (2004). Water and identity: An analysis of the Cauvery River water dispute. BCID Research Paper Number 3, Bradford, UK: Bradford Centre for International Development Series.Google Scholar
Anderson, E. W. (1994). Hydropolitics, conflict analysis and management. Paper for the International Water Resources Association's VIII Congress, Cairo, November 21–25, 1994.Google Scholar
Anderson, T. L., and Snyder, P. (1997). Water markets: Priming the invisible pump. Washington, DC: Cato Institute.Google Scholar
Euroconsult, Arcadis. (2000). Transboundary water management as an international public good. Stockholm: Ministry for Foreign Affairs, Sweden. Available at http://www.fritzes.se.Google Scholar
Arnold, J. L. (1988). The evolution of the 1936 Flood Control Act. Fort Belvoir, VA: USACE Office of History.Google Scholar
Asad, M., Azevedo, L. G., Kemper, K. E., and Simpson, L. D. (1999). Management of water resources: Bulk water pricing in Brazil. World Bank Technical Paper No. 432.Google Scholar
Ashton, P. J. (2000). Southern African water conflicts: Are they inevitable or preventable? In Water wars: Enduring myth or impending reality, edited by Solomon, H. and Turton, A. R.. Africa Dialogue Monograph Series No. 2. Durban, South Africa: The African Centre for the Constructive Resolution of Disputes (ACCORD), pp. 62–105.Google Scholar
Ashton, P. J., and Turton, A. R. (2006). Water and security in Sub-Saharan Africa: Emerging concepts and their implications for effective water resource management in the Southern African region. In Globalisation and environmental challenges, edited by Brauch, H. G., Grin, J., Mesjasz, C., Behera, N. C., Chourou, B., Spring, U. O., Liotta, P. H., and Kameira-Mbote, P.. Berlin: Springer Verlag.Google Scholar
Ashworth, A. E. (1968). The sociology of trench warfare 1914–18. British Journal of Sociology, 19(4, December), 407–423.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashworth, T. (1980). Trench warfare, 1914–1918: The live and let live system. New York: Holmes & Meier.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aslov, S. M. (2003). IFAS Initiatives in the Aral Sea Basin. 3rd World Water Forum, Kyoto; March 16–23, 2003.Google Scholar
Attia, H. (1985). Water-sharing rights in the Jerid Oases of Tunisia. In Property, social structure and law in the modern Middle East, edited by Mayer, A. E.. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, pp. 85–106.Google Scholar
Australian Bureau of Statistics. (2006). Water Access Entitlements, Allocations and Trading, 2004–05. Open Document 4610.0.55.003. Accessed at http://www.abs.gov.au/AUSSTATS/abs@.nsf/ProductsbyTopic/E2D1678343AFE4BDCA257205002428DD?OpenDocument.
Australian National Water Commission. (2006). National water initiative. Accessed at http://www.nwc.gov.au/nwi/index.cfm#pricing.
Avis, C. (2003). Danube River basin strategy for public participation in river basin management planning 2003–2009. May 12, 2003, WWF, funded by UNDP/GEF under the Danube Regional Project.Google Scholar
Avruch, K. (1998). Culture and conflict resolution. Washington, DC: U.S. Institute of Peace.Google Scholar
Axelrod, R. (1984). The evolution of cooperation. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Azar, E. E. (1980). The conflict and peace data bank (COPDAB) project. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 24(1), 143–152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Azevedo, L. G. (1997). Brazil. In Water pricing experiences: An international perspective. World Bank Technical Paper No. 386. Washington DC.Google Scholar
Bahr, J. (1988). Personal communication.
Baillat, A. (2004). Power asymmetries along international watercourses: Hydropolitics in the Himalayan kingdoms. Fifth Pan-European Conference Standing Group on International Relations, The Hague; September 9-11, 2004.Google Scholar
Baillat, A. (2005). Hydropolitics of international water transfers: The challenges of water resources commodification. A paper prepared for the ISA Conference, March 1–5.Google Scholar
Bandyopadhayay, J. (2002). Water management in the Ganges–Brahmaputra Basin: Emerging challenges for the 21st century. In Conflict Management of Water Resources, edited by Chatterji, M., Arlosoroff, S., and Guha, G.. Burlington, VT: Ashgate, pp. 179–218.Google Scholar
Barber, B. (1985). Strong democracy: Participatory politics for a new age. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Barraque, B. (2000). Participatory Processes in Water Management (PPWM). Proceedings of the Satellite Conference to the World Conference on Science: International Conference on Participatory Processes in Water Management, June 23–30, 1999, Budapest, Hungary, edited by József Gayer, . UNESCO-IHP/IA2P/IWRA. Paris: UNESCO. IHP-V.Google Scholar
Bascheck, B., and Hegglin, M. (2004). Plata/Parana River basin, a case study. Swiss Federal Insititute for Environmental Science and Technology.Google Scholar
Baviskar, A. (1995). In the belly of the river: Tribal conflicts over development in the Narmada Valley. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Biçak, H. A., and Jenkins, G. P. (1999). Costs and pricing policies related to transporting water by tanker from Turkey to North Cyprus. Development Discussion Paper No. 689. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Institute for International Development.Google Scholar
Beaumont, P. (1991). Transboundary water disputes in the Middle East. Paper presented at a conference on transboundary waters in the Middle East, Ankara.
Beaumont, P. (2000). Conflict, coexistence, and cooperation: A study of water use in the Jordan basin. In Water in the Middle East: A geography of peace, edited by Amery, H., and Wolf, A.. Austin: University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Beecher, J. A. (2000). Privatization, monopoly, and structured competition in the water industry: Is there a role for regulation?Water Resources Update, 117, 13–20.Google Scholar
Bennett, J. W. (1974). Anthropological contribution to the cultural ecology and management of water resources. In Man and water: Social sciences and management of water resources, edited by James, L. D.. Lexington: Lexington University Press, p. 67.Google Scholar
Bennett, L. L., and Howe, C. W. (1998). The interstate river compact: Incentives for noncompliance. Water Resources Research, 34(3), 485–495.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bennett, L., Ragland, S., and Yolles, P. (1998). Facilitating international agreements through an interconnected game approach: The case of river basins. In Conflict and cooperation on trans-boundary water resources, edited by Just, R. and Netanyahu, S.. The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ben-Shachar H. (1989). Introduction In Economic Cooperation in the Middle East, edited by Fishelson, G.. Boulder: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Bercovitch, J. (1986). International mediation: A study of incidence, strategies, and conditions of successful outcomes. Cooperation and Conflict, 21, 155–168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Betlem, I. (1995). River basin planning and management. Erowater Horizontal Report, Research Report No. 5. RBA Delft University of Technology.Google Scholar
Bhatnagar, B. (1992). Participatory development in the World Bank: Opportunities and concerns. World Bank Workshop on Participatory Development, Washington, DC.CrossRef
Bingham, G. (1986). Resolving environmental disputes: A decade of experience. Washington, DC: Conservation Foundation.Google Scholar
Bingham, G., and Orenstein, S. G. (1989). The role of negotiation in managing water conflicts. In Managing water related conflicts: The engineer's role, edited by Viessman, W. Jr. and Smerdon, E. T.. New York: American Society of Civil Engineers, pp 38–53.Google Scholar
Bingham, G., Wolf, A., and Wohlgenant, T. (1994). Resolving water disputes: Conflict and cooperation in the U.S., Asia, and the Near East. Washington, DC: U.S. Agency for International Development.Google Scholar
Biswas, A. K. (1970). History of hydrology. Amsterdam: North-Holland Publishing.Google Scholar
Biswas, A. (1992). Indus Water Treaty: The negotiating process. Water International, 17(44), 201–209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biswas, A. K. (1993). Management of international waters: Problems and perspective. Water Resources Development, 9(2), 161–188.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biswas, A. K. (1995). World Water Council highlight editorial. Water Resources Development, 11(2), 101–102.Google Scholar
Biswas, A. K. (1999). Management of international waters. Water Resources Development, 15, 429–441.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biswas, A. K., and Hashimoto, T. (editors). (1996). Asian international waters: From Ganges–Brahmaputra to Mekong. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Biswas, A. K., and Tortajada, C. (editors). (2005). Water pricing and public-private partnership. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Biswas, A. K., and Tortajada, C. (editors). (2006). Impacts of mega-conferences on the water sector. New York: Springer.Google Scholar
Blackmore, D. (2002). Reforming the water sector, what Australia has done. In Integrated water management at river basin level: An Institutional Development Perspective, edited by Alearts, G. and LeMoigne, G.. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
Blaikie, P., Cannon, T., Davies, I., and Wisner, B. (1994). At risk: natural hazards, peoples' vulnerability and disasters. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Blanche, E. (2001). Turkey's water sales to Israel signal new tension over precious resource. Daily Star. October 2001, Daily Star archives.Google Scholar
Blatter, J., and Ingram, H. (editors). (2001). Reflections on water: New approaches to transboundary conflicts and cooperation. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Bleed, A. S. (1990). Platte River conflict resolution. In Managing water-related conflicts: The engineer's role, edited by Viessman, W. Jr. and Smerdon, E. T.. New York: American Society of Civil Engineers, pp. 131–140.Google Scholar
Blomquist, W., Heikkila, T., and Schlager, E. (2004). Building the agenda for instituional research in water resource management. Journal of the American Water Resources Association, 40(4), 925–936.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
BNamericas.com. (2005). Brazil: Bill to establish a national environmental sanitation policy submitted. May 31. Accessed at http://www.irc.nl/page/23948
Bolte, J. P., Hulse, D. W., Gregory, S. V., and Smith, C. (2004). Modeling biocomplexity – Actors, landscapes and alternative futures. Keynote speech. Proceedings from the International Environmental Modelling and Software Society, Conference on Complexity and Integrated Resources Management, University of Osnabrück, Germany, 14–17 June 2004.Google Scholar
Booth, William. (1991). Did Maya Tap Water for Power?Washington Post. February 18, 1991.Google Scholar
Brewster, M. R., and Buros, O. K. (1985). Non-conventional water resources: Economics and experiences in developing countries (I). Natural Resources Forum, 9(1), 65–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brittain, R. (1958). Rivers, man and myths: From fish spears to water mills. Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Company, Inc.Google Scholar
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). (2005). Thousands flee Kenyan water clash. BBC News Africa, January 24, 2005. Available at http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/4201483.stm.
Brochmann, M. (2006). Cooperation in international river basins. An empirical analysis of the impact of sharing a river basin on cooperation. Paper presented at the 14th Norwegian National Conference in Political Science, Bergen, 4–6 January 2006.Google Scholar
Bruch, C., Jansky, L., Nakayama, M., and Salewicz, K. A. (editors). (2005). Public participation in the governance of international freshwater resources. Tokyo: United Nations University Press.Google Scholar
Buck, S. J., Gleason, G. W., and Jofuku, M. S. (1993). The institutional imperative: Resolving transboundary water conflict in arid agricultural regions of the United States and the commonwealth of independent states. Natural Resources Journal, 33, 595–628.Google Scholar
Bulkley, J. W. (1995). Integrated watershed management: Past, present, and future. Water Resources Update, 100, 7–18.Google Scholar
Bulloch, J., and Darwish, A. (1993). Water wars: Coming conflicts in the Middle East. London: St. Edmundsbury Press.Google Scholar
Burchi, S., and Mechlem, K. (2005). Groundwater in international law: Compilation of treaties and other legal instruments. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), FAO Legislative Study No. 86.Google Scholar
Burchi, S., and Spreij, M. (2003). Institutions for International Freshwater Management. Report for the FAO Development Law Service. SC-2003/WS/41 Paris: FAO Legal Office UNESCO/IHP/WWAP. Available at http://webworld.unesco.org/water/wwap/pccp/cd/pdf/legal_tools/institutions_for_int_freshwater_management_2.pdf.Google Scholar
Butts, K. H. (1997). The strategic importance of water. Parameters, 27, 65–83.Google Scholar
Cady, F., and Soden, D. L. (2001). The legal-institutional analysis model and water policymaking in a bi-national setting. Journal of the American Water Resources Association, 37(1), 47–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cai, X., and Rosegrant, M. W. (2002). Global water demand and supply projections, Part I. A modeling approach. Water International, 27(2), 159–169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cano, G. (1985). The “Del Plata” basin: Summary chronicle of its development process and related conflicts. In Management of international river basin conflicts, edited by Vlachos, E., Webb, A., and Murphy, I.. Proceedings of a Workshop held at the Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Laxenberg, Austria, September 22–25, 1986.Google Scholar
Cano, G. (1989). The development of the law in international water resources and the work of the International Law Commission. Water International, 14, 167–171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Caponera, D. (1985). Patterns of cooperation in international water law: Principles and institutions. Natural Resources Journal, 25(3), 563–587.Google Scholar
Caponera, D. (1987). International Water Resources Law in the Indus Basin. In Water resources policy for Asia, edited by Ali, M.. Boston: Balkema, 509–515.Google Scholar
Caponera, D. A., (1995). Shared waters and international law. In The peaceful management of transboundary resources, edited by Gerald, H. Blake et al., 121–126.Google Scholar
Carius, A., Dabelko, G. D., and Wolf, A. T. (2004). Water, conflict, and cooperation. Policy briefing paper for the United Nations and Global Security Initiative of the United Nations Foundation. Available at http://www.un-globalsecurity.org/pdf/Carius_Dabelko_Wolf.pdf.Google Scholar
Carius, A., Feil, M., and Taenzler, D. (2003). Addressing environmental risks in Central Asia: Risks, policies, capacities. Report for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, the United Nations Development Programme, and the United Nations Environment Programme, Bratislava: OSCE, UNDP, and UNEP.Google Scholar
Carmo Vaz, A. (1999). Problems in the management of international river basins – the case of the Incomati. River basin management: Proceedings of the UNESCO international workshop, The Hague, 27–29 October 1999, edited by Mostert, E.. IHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31.Google Scholar
Vaz, Carmo A., and Lopez, P. (2000), The Incompati and Limpopo, international river basins: A view from downstream. In Savenije, H. H. G., Zaag, P., and Wolf, A. T. (editors), Management of shared river basins. Water Policy, 2(2), 99–112.Google Scholar
Catão, L. A. V., and Solomou, S. N. (2005). Effective exchange rates and the classical gold standard adjustment, American Economic Review, 4(95), 1259–1275.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cernea, M. M. (1992). Putting people first: Sociological variables in rural development. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
Chakraborty, R. (2004). Sharing of river waters among India and its neighbors in the 21st century: War or peace?Water International, 29(2), 201–208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chatterji, M., Arlosoroff, S., and Guha, G. (editors). (2002). Conflict management of water resources. Burlington, VT: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Chenoweth, J. L., and Feitelson, E. (2001). Analysis of factors influencing data and information exchange in international river basins: Can such exchanges be used to build confidence in cooperative management?Water International, 26(4), 499–512.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chinatown (1974). Paramount Pictures. Directed by Roman Polanski. Written by Robert Towne. Performed by Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway, and John Huston.
CIDA. (1999). Public Participation in Environmental Impact Assessments in Developing Countries: Index of Useful Resources. Available online at http://www.acdi-cida.gc.ca.
Clark, E. H., Bingham, G., and Orenstein, S. G. (1991). Resolving water disputes: Obstacles and opportunities. Resolve, 23(1), 1–10.Google Scholar
Clark, G. (1952). Ecological zones and economic stages. In Prehistoric Europe: The economic basis. London: Metheun. In Man and water: Social sciences and management of water resources, edited by James, L. D. (1974). Lexington: Lexington University Press, p. 47.Google Scholar
Clean Air Act (CAA). (1970). 42 U.S.C. s/s 7401 et seq. Available at http://www.epa.gov/airprogm/oar/caa/index.html.
Clean Water Act (CWA). (1977). 33 U.S.C. ss/1251 et seq. Available at http://www.access.gpo.gov/uscode/title33/chapter26_.html.
Cohen, R. (1993). An advocate's view. In Culture and negotiation: The resolution of water disputes, edited by Faure, G. O., and Rubin, J. Z.. London: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Comtex News Network. (2004). Lesotho “Will continue to fight graft.” September 10.
Conca, K. (2006). Governing water: Contentious transnational politics and global institution building. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Conca, K., and Dabelko, G. D. (editors). (2002). Environmental peacemaking. Washington, DC: Woodrow Wilson Press.Google Scholar
Conca, K., Wu, F., and Mei, C. (2006). Global regime formation or complex institution building? The principled content of international river agreements. International Studies Quarterly, 50, 263.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Conley, A. H., and Niekerk, P. H. (2000). Sustainable management of international waters: The Orange River case. Water Policy, 2, 131–149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooley, J. K. (1984). The war over water. Foreign Policy, 54, 3–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Correlates of War (COW) project. (2006). University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University. http://cow2.la.psu.edu.
Corrigan, E. P. Jr. (1994). Oil for water. National Geographic, 10(1), 9.Google Scholar
Coser, L. (1959). The functions of social conflict. New York: Free Press.Google Scholar
Crawford, S. (1988). Mayordomo: Chronicle of an acequia in northern New Mexico. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.Google Scholar
Creighton, J., Priscoli, Delli J., and Dunning, M. (1983). Public involvement techniques: A Reader of ten years experiences at the Institute for Water Resources. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers IWR Research Report 87-R-1. Ft. Belvoir, VA: Institute for Water Resources.Google Scholar
Creighton, J. (1998a). Use of values in public participation in the planning process. In Public involvement: A reader of ten years experience at the Institute for Water Resources, edited by Creighton, J., Priscoli, J. Delli, and Dunning, C. M.. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers IWR Research Report 82-R-1. Alexandria, VA: Institute for Water Resources.Google Scholar
Creighton, J. (1998b). A thought process for designing public involvement. In Public involvement: A reader of ten years experience at the Institute for Water Resources, edited by Creighton, J., Priscoli, J. Delli, and Dunning, C. M.. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers IWR Research Report 82-R-1. Alexandria, VA: Institute for Water Resources, p. 131.Google Scholar
Creighton, J. (1999). Tools and techniques for effective public participation in water resources decisions. Participatory Processes in Water Management (PPWM): Proceedings of the Satellite Conference to the World Conference on Science: International Conference on Participatory Processes in Water Management, June 28–30,1999, Budapest, Hungary, edited by Gayer, . UNESCO-IHP/IA2P/IWRA. Paris: UNESCO. IHP-V.Google Scholar
Creighton, J., and Priscoli, Delli J. (2004). Public involvement and teaming in planning: A training manual. Ft. Belvoir, VA: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Institute for Water Resources.Google Scholar
Rosa, Da J. E. (1983). Economics, politics, and hydroelectric power: The Parana River Basin. Latin American Research Review, 68(3), 77–107.Google Scholar
Daniels, S. E., and Walker, G. B. (2001). The Collaborative Learning Approach. Westport, CT: Praeger.Google Scholar
DANUBE International Commission for the protection of the Danube River. Available online at www.icpdr.org.
Davidge, Ric. (1994). Water exports. Newsletter of WaterBank.com. Accessed at http://www.waterbank.com/Newsletters/nws12.html.Google Scholar
Davis, U., Maks, A., and Richardson, J. (1980). Israel's water policies. Journal of Palestine Studies, 9(2), 3–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deason, J. P., Schad, T. M., and Sherk, G. W. (2001). Water policy in the United States: A perspective. Water Policy, 3, 175–192.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delaware River Basin Commission (2006). (Updated 19 January 2007). Available at http://www.state.nj.us/drbc/.
Dellapenna, J. (1994). Treaties as instruments for managing internationally-shared water resources: Restricted sovereignty vs. community of property. Case-Western Reserve Journal of International Law, 26, 27–56.Google Scholar
Dellapenna, J. (1995). Building international water management institutions: The role of treaties and other legal arrangements. In Water in the Middle East: Legal, political, and commercial implications, edited by Allan, J. A. and Mallat, C.. London and New York: Tauris Academic Studies, pp. 55–89.Google Scholar
Dellapena, J. (1997). Personal communication.
Dellapenna, J. W. (2001). The customary international law of transboundary fresh waters. International Journal of Global Environmental Issues, 1(3/4), 264–305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delli Priscoli, J. (1975). Citizen Advisory Groups and Conflict Resolution in Regional Water Resources Planning.
Delli Priscoli, J. (1976). Public participation in regional intergovernmental water resources planning: Conceptual frameworks and comparative case studies, Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Georgetown University, Washington, DC.
Priscoli, Delli J. (1983). Retraining the modern civil engineer. The Environmentalist, 3, 137–146.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J. (1988). Conflict resolution in water resources: Two 404 general permits. Journal of Water Resources Planning and Management, 114(1), 66–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J. (1989). Public involvement, conflict management: Means to EQ and social objectives. Journal of Water Resource Planning and Management, 115(1), 31–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J. (1990). Public involvement, conflict management and dispute resolution in water resources and environmental decisions making. Institute for Water Resources, USACE, IWR Working Paper 90 ADR WP 2.Google Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J. (1994). Conflict resolution, collaboration and management in the international and regional water resources issues. 7th Congress of the International Water Resources Association (IWRA), Cairo, Egypt, November 1994.Google Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J. (1996). Conflict resolution, collaboration and management in international water resources. Institute of Water Resources (IWR) and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), Working Paper 96-ADR-WP-6. Alexandria, VA: IWR/USACE.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delli Priscoli, J. (1998a). Chapters 2 and 3. In Strengthening the capacity of the United Nations in prevention and resolution of international environmental conflicts, edited by Trolldalen, J. M. and Wennesland, T.. Oslo: CESAR.Google Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J. (1998b). Water and civilization: Using history to reframe water policy debates and to build a new ecological realism, Water Policy, 1(6), 623–636.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J. (1999/2000). Foreword, in Management of Shared River Basins, ed. Savenije, Zaag, and Wolf, . Water Policy, 2, 1–2.
Priscoli, Delli J. (2000a). Water security, interdependency, dependence and vulnerability. Stockholm 2000 Symposium, Institute for Water Resources, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, August 2000, Stockholm.Google Scholar
Delli Priscoli, J. (2000b). What is public participation? Proceedings of the Satellite Conference to the World Conference on Science: International Conference on Participatory Processes in Water Management. June 28–30, 1999. Budapest, Hungary, edited by Gayer, . UNESCO-IHP/IA2P/IWRA Technical Documents in Hydrology No. 30. Paris: UNESCO-IHP-V.Google Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J. (2001a). Participation, river basin organizations and flood management. ESCAP, Bangkok, October 2001.Google Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J. (2001b). River basins organizations. ESCAP.Google Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J. (2004). River basin organizations, RBO: U.S. experiences. World Bank Training on building RBOs, Abuja, Nigeria, June 2004.Google Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J. (2005a). Overview: Global water policy and institutional trends. Keynote lecture at water conference for CEOs of water utilities and political leaders in Australia, August 2005. Sydney: BOG World Water Council, Institute for Water Resources USACE.Google Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J. (2005b). The Columbia-Snake River – Nch'i-Wana; Water Infrastructure and Development, Presentation during Stockholm Water Week, Stockholm, Sweden, August 25, 2005.Google Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J., and Creighton, J. (2004). Second Ten Years. Alexandria, VA: IWR.Google Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J., and Hassan, F. (1997). Water and Civilization. UNESCO IHP. Paris.Google Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J., and Moore, C. (1985). Executive training course in conflict management. Institute for Water Resources, USACE, Alexandria, VA.Google Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J., and Moore, C. (1988). ADR training. Alexandria, VA: USACE.Google Scholar
Priscoli, Delli J., and Montville, J. (1994). Report on preventing Slovak–Hungarian ethnic violence. Washington, DC: Center for Strategic and International Studies.Google Scholar
Dillman, J. (1989). Water rights in the occupied territories. Journal of Palestine Studies, 19(1), 46–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dinar, A., and Wolf, A. T. (1994a). Economic potential and political considerations of regional water trade: The western Middle East example. Resources and Energy Economics, 16(4, Winter), 335–356.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dinar, A., and Wolf, A. T. (1994b). International markets for water and the potential for regional cooperation: Economic and political perspectives in the western Middle East. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 43(1, October), 43–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dinar, A. (1998). Water policy reforms, information needs and implementation obstacles. Water Policy, 1(4), 367–382.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dinar, A. (editor). (2000). The political economy of water pricing reforms. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Dinar, A., and Subramanian, A. (editors). (1997). Water pricing experiences: An international perspective. World Bank Technical Paper No. 386. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
Dinar, S. (2004). Treaty principles and patterns: Negotiations over international rivers. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, MD.
Dinar, S., and Dinar, A. (2003). Recent developments in the literature on conflict, negotiation and cooperation over shared international freshwater. Natural Resources Journal, 43(4, Fall), 1217–1286.Google Scholar
Diplas, P. (2002). Integrated decision making for watershed management: Introduction. Journal of the American Water Resources Association, 38(2), 337–340.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Donahue, J. M., and Johnston, B. R. (editors). (1998). Water, culture, and power: Local struggles in a global context. Washington, DC: Island Press.Google Scholar
Dryzek, J., and Hunter, S. (1987). Environmental mediation for international problems. International Studies Quarterly, 31, 87–102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dukhovny, V., and Ruziev, U. (1999). Aral Sea. River Basin Management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop, The Hague, October 27–29, 1999, edited by Mostert, E.. IHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31.Google Scholar
Dukhovny, V., and Sokolov, V. (2002). International arrangement to manage the Aral Sea Basin. In Integrated water management at river basin level: An institutional development perspective, edited by Alearts, G. and LeMoigne, G.. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
Dukhovny, V., and Sokolov, V. (2003). Lessons on cooperation building to manage water conflicts in the Aral Sea basin. Paris: UNESCO IHP Technical Documents in Hydrology, PCCP Series No. 11.Google Scholar
Dworsky, L., and Allee, D. (1997). A critique of the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement on its 25th anniversary and a discussion of the Great Lakes basin ecosystem as a management tool. Report from a Seminar; Cornell University. Available at http://www.on.ec.gc.ca/glwqa/critique-e.html.Google Scholar
Eaton, J., and Eaton, D. (1994). Water utilisation in the Yarmouk–Jordan, 1192–1992. In Water and peace in the Middle East, edited Isaac, J. and Shuval, H.. Amsterdam: Elsevier Publishers, pp. 93–106.Google Scholar
EC Europe. (2007). Bulk water (SR11378). Accessed at http://www.eceurope.com/showrooms/details.htm?itemID=11378&session. Accessed January 13, 2007.
Eckstein, G. E. (2004) Protecting a hidden treasure: The UN International Law Commission and the international law of transboundary ground water resources. Sustainable Development Law and Policy, 1, 6–12.Google Scholar
Eckstein, G., and Eckstein, Y. (2003). A hydrogeological approach to transboundary ground water resources and international law. American University International Law Review, 19, 201–258.Google Scholar
Eckstein, O. (1958). Water resources development: The economics of project evaluation. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Eckstein, O., and Krutilla, J. (1958). Multipurpose river development. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press.Google Scholar
Eckstein, Y., and Eckstein, G. E. (2005). Transboundary aquifers: Conceptual models for development of international law. Journal of Groundwater, 43(5), 679–690.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
ECLAC. (1997). Network for cooperation in integrated water resource management for sustainable development in Lain America and the Caribbean. ECLAC, Circular No. 6, December 1997.
Economic Commission for Europe. (1999a). Draft guidelines on public participation in water management. MP. WAT/2000/6, add.1, December 20, 1999.
Economic Commission for Europe. (1999b). The need for a strategy and framework for compliance with agreements on transboundary waters and guidelines on public participation in water management. MP. WAT/2000/4, December 21, 1999.
Economic Commission for Europe. (2000). Geneva Strategy and Framework for Monitoring Compliance with Agreements on Transboundary Waters, MP. WAT/2000/5/add. 1, February 8, 2000.
Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean. (1997). Network for Cooperation in Integrated Water Resources Management for Sustainable Development in Latin America and the Caribbean, ECLAC, Circular (6), December.
Elhance, A. P. (1999). Hydropolitics in the 3rd world: Conflict and cooperation in international river basins. Washington, DC: United States Institute of Peace.Google Scholar
Elhance, A. P. (2000). Hydropolitics in the third world: Conflict and cooperation in international river basins. International Negotiation, 5 (2, February).Google Scholar
Endangered Species Act (ESA). (1973). 7 U.S.C. 136;16 U.S.C. 460 et seq. Available at http://www.access.gpo.gov/uscode/title16/chapter35_.html
Environment Australia. (2002). Australia's Water Reforms. Available at http://www.deh.gov.au/commitments/wssd/publications/water.html#download.
Environmental Programme for the Danube Basin. (1992–1994). Reports dated August 1992–June 1994.
ESCAP. (1999a). ESCAP-UNDP guidelines for participatory planning of rural infrastructure. New York: United Nations.
ESCAP. (1999b). Regional cooperation in the twenty first century on flood control and management in Asia and the Pacific. New York: United Nations.
European Commission. (2002). Water is life: Water framework directive. Informational summary leaflet. Available at http://ec.europa.eu/environment/water/water-framework/pdf/leaflet_en.pdf.
European Parliament and the Council of the European Union. (2000). Directive 2000/60/EC of 23 October 2000 establishing a framework for Community action in the field of water policy.
Executive Action Team (EXACT) Multilateral Working Group on Water Resources. (2006). ExactFactsheet.pdf. Available at http://www.exact-me.org
Export Bureau. (2007). Water Exports NZ Limited. Accessed at http://www.exportbureau.com/company_report.html?code=28672&name=water_exports_nz_limited. January 13.
Faigman, D. L. (1999). Legal alchemy – The use and misuse of science in the law. New York: W. H. Freeman and Co.Google Scholar
Falkenmark, M. (1986). Fresh waters as a factor in strategic policy and action. In Global resources and international conflict: Environmental factors in strategic policy and action, edited by Westing, A. H.. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 85–113.Google Scholar
Falkenmark, M. (1989). Middle East hydropolitics: Water scarcity and conflicts in the Middle East. Ambio, 18(6), 350–352.Google Scholar
Falkenmark, M., Lundquist, J., and Widstrand, C. (1989). Macro-scale water scarcity requires micro-scale approaches: Aspects of vulnerability in semi-arid development. Natural Resources Forum, 14, 258–267.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Faure, G. O., and Rubin, J. Z. (1993). Culture and negotiation: The resolution of water disputes. London: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
Feehan, J. (2001). Export of bulk water from Newfoundland and Labrador: A preliminary assessment of economic feasibility. A report prepared for the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador.Google Scholar
Feitelson, E. (2006). Impediments to the management of shared aquifers: A political economy perspective. Hydrogeology Journal, 14, 319–329.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Feitelson, E., and Chenoweth, J. (2002). Water poverty: Towards a meaningful indicator. Water Policy, 4, 263–281.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Feitelson, E., and Haddad, M. (editors). (1995). Joint management of shared aquifers. Harry S. Truman Research Institute, Hebrew University and the Palestinian Consultancy Group, Jerusalem.Google Scholar
Feitelson, E., and Haddad, M. (1998). Identification of joint management structures for shared aquifers. Technical Paper No. 415. Washington, DC: World Bank.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Feitelson, E., and Haddad, M. (editors). (2000). Management of shared groundwater resources: The Israeli–Palestinian case with an international perspective. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers and Ottawa: International Development Research Centre.Google Scholar
Finger, M., and Allouche, J. (2002). Water privatisation: Trans-national corporations and the re-regulation of the water industry. London and New York: Spon Press.Google Scholar
Fischhendler, I. (2004). Legal and institutional adaptation to climate uncertainty: a study of international rivers. Water Policy, 6, 281–302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fischhendler, I. (2008). Ambiguity in transboundary environmental dispute resolution: The Israeli–Jordanian water agreement. Journal of Peace Research, 45(1), 91–110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fischhendler, I., and Feitelson, E. (2005). The formation and viability of non-basin transboundary water management: The case of the U.S.–Canada boundary water. Geoforum, 36, 792–804.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fisher, F. M., Arlosoroff, S., Eckstein, Z., Haddadin, M., Hamati, S. G., Huber-Lee, A., Jarrar, A., Jayyousi, A.Shamir, U., and Wesseling, H. (2002). Optimal water management and conflict resolution: The Middle East Water Project. Water Resources Research, 38(11), 25-1–25-17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fisher, R., and Ury, W. L. (1981). Getting to yes. London: Hutchinson Business.Google Scholar
Fisher, R., and Ury, W. (1991). Getting to yes: Negotiating agreement without giving in, 2nd ed. New York: Penguin Books.Google Scholar
Flow, Inc. (2007). Water to the world. Accessed at http://www.flowinc.com. January 13.
Frederiksen, H. D. (1992). Water resources institutions: Some principles and practices, Papers 191. World Bank – Technical Papers.Google Scholar
Freeman, D. M. (2000). Wicked water problems: Sociology and local water organizations in addressing water resources policy. Journal of the American Water Resources Association, 36(3), 483–491.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frey, F. W. (1993). The political context of conflict and cooperation over international river basins. Water International, 18(1), 54–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friends of the Earth, Middle East. (2005). Good water neighbors: A model for community development programs in regions of conflict. Amman, Bethlehem, and Tel Aviv: EcoPeace.
Frohlich, N., and Oppenheimer, J. (1994). Alienable privatization policies: The choice between inefficiency and injustice. In Water quantity/quality management and conflict resolution, edited by Dinar, A. and Loehman, E.. Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers.Google Scholar
Furlong, K., and Gleditsch, N. P. (2003). The boundary dataset. Conflict Management and Peace Science, 20(1), 93–117. Data available at http://www.prio.no/cscw/datasets.CrossRef
Furlong, K., Gleditsch, N. P., and Hegre, H. (2006). Geographic opportunity and Neomalthusian willingness: Boundaries, shared rivers, and conflict. International Interactions, 32(1), 79–108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
García-Acevedo, M. R. (2001). The confluence of water, patterns of settlement, and constructions of the border in the Imperial and the Mexicali valleys (1900–1999). In Reflections on water: New approaches to transboundary conflicts and cooperation, edited by Blatter, J. and Ingram, H.. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Giannias, D. A., and Lekakis, J. N. (1996). Fresh surface water resource allocation between Bulgaria and Greece. Environmental and Resource Economics, 8(4, December), 473–483.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giordano, M. (2002). Water quality management in international river basins. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR.
Giordano, M., Giordano, M., and Wolf, A. T. (2002). The geography of water conflict and cooperation: Internal pressures and international manifestations. Geographical Journal, 168(4), 293–312.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giordano, M. A., and Wolf, A. T. (2003). Sharing waters: Post-Rio international water management. Natural Resources Forum, 27, 163–171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glantz, M. H. (1998). Creeping environmental problems in the Aral Sea basin. In Kobori, I. and Glantz, M. H. (editors). Central Eurasian Water Crisis: Caspian, Aral and Dead Seas. Tokyo: United Nations University Press, pp. 25–28.Google Scholar
Gleditsch, N. P., and Hamner, J. (2001). Shared rivers, conflict, and cooperation. Paper presented at the 42nd Annual Convention of the International Studies Association, Chicago, IL, 21–24 February 2001, and The Fourth European International Relations Conference, University of Kent, Canterbury, September 8–10.Google Scholar
Gleditsch, N. P., Furlong, K., Hegre, H., Lacina, B., and Owen, T. (2006). Conflicts over shared rivers: Resource scarcity or fuzzy boundaries?Political Geography, 25, 361–382.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gleick, P. H. (1993). Water and conflict: Fresh water resources and international security. International Security, 18(1), 79–112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gleick, P. (1994). Water, war, and peace in the Middle East. Environment, 36(3), 6–15, 35–42.Google Scholar
Gleick, P. (1996). Basic water requirements for human activities: Neeting basic needs. Water International, 21(2), 83–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gleick, P. H. (1998). The world's water 1998–1999: The biennial report on freshwater resources. Washington, DC: Island Press.Google Scholar
Gleick, P. H. (2003). The world's water: Biennial report on freshwater resources 2002–2003. Washington, DC: Island Press.Google Scholar
Gleick, P., Wolff, G., Chalecki, E. L., and Reyes, R. (2002). The new economy of water: The risks and benefits of globalization and privatization of fresh water. Oakland: Pacific Institute.Google Scholar
Glick, T. F. (1970). Irrigation and society in medieval valencia. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, pp. 31, 34–37, 52–53, 176–77, 198–206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Global Environment Facility. (2000). Environmental protection and sustainable integrated management of the Guaraní Aquifer. Proposal for Project Development Funds, March, pp. 4–7.
Global Environment Facility. (2001). Project Report Document, Report No. PID10124, 20 November.
Global News Wire. (2003). Ex-Lesotho water chief must serve 18 years. South African Press Association. April 9.
Golden, T. (1992). New York Times. Mexico moves ahead with embattled dam project in Mayan area. March 15.Google Scholar
Goldfarb, W. (1997). Teaching water resources policy to university science and engineering students: Opportunities and challenges. Journal of the American Water Resources Association, 33(2), 255–259.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gonzalez, A., and Rubio, S. (1992). Optimal interbasin water transfers in Spain. Presented at a workshop, Sharing Scarce Fresh Water Resources in the Mediterranean Basin: An Economic Perspective, Padova, Italy, April 23–24.Google Scholar
Gopalakrishnan, G., Tortajada, C., and Biswas, A. K. (editors). (2005). Water institutions: Policies, performance, and prospects. New York: Springer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gooch, G. D., and Stålnacke, P. (2006). Integrated transboundary water management in theory and practice: Experiences from the new EU eastern borders. London: IWA Publishing.Google Scholar
Goslin, I. V. (1977). International river compacts: Impact on Colorado. In Water needs for the future – Political, economic, legal, and technological issues in a national and international framework, edited by Nanda, V.. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh (1976). White paper on the Ganges water dispute. September.
Government of Newfoundland and Labrador. (2001). Export of Bulk Water from Newfoundland and Labrador: A Report of the Ministerial Committee Examining the Bulk Export of Water. October. Accessed at http://www.gov.nf.ca/publicat/ReportoftheMinisterailCommitteeExaminingtheExportofBulkWater.PDF.
Green Cross International. (2000). National Sovereignty and International Watercourses. Green Cross International, Geneva, March 2000.
Grey, D. (2008). Infrastructure for achieving water security. Keynote presentation for World Bank, African Water Week, Tunis, March 26, 2008.Google Scholar
Gruen, G. (1993). Recent negotiations over the waters of the Euphrates and Tigris. Proceedings of the International Symposium on Water Resources in the Middle East: Policy and Institutional Aspects, Urbana, IL, October 24–27.Google Scholar
Gunderson, L. H, and Pritchard, L. (2002). Resilience and the behavior of large-scale systems. Washington, DC: Island Press.Google Scholar
Gurr, T. (1969). Why men rebel. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Gurr, T. R. (1985). On the political consequences of scarcity and economic decline. International Studies Quarterly, 29(1), 51–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gyuk, I. (1977). Resources and the dynamics of cultures. Water International, 2(1, March), 8–10.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haddadin, M. J. (2001). Water scarcity impacts and potential conflicts in the MENA region. Water International, 26(4, December), 460–470.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haddadin, M. J., and Shamir, U. (2003). Jordan case study. Paris: UNESCO IHP Technical Documents in Hydrology, PCCP Series No. 15.Google Scholar
Hafidh, H. (2003). Iraq wants to clinch water deal with Syria, Turkey. Environmental News Network. Updated 16 September. Available at http://www.enn.com/news/2003-09-16/s_8435.asp.
Hamerlynk, O. (editor). (2000). An alternative to the water management of the Senegal River. In The World Commission on Dams. London: Earthscan Publishers. ATW: Can't find this; if nec., cut from ref's.Google Scholar
Hamner, J., and Wolf, A. (1998). Patterns in international water resource treaties: The transboundary freshwater dispute database. Colorado Journal of International Environmental Law and Policy, 1997 Yearbook. pp. 157–177.Google Scholar
Haught, J. F. (1996). Christianity and ecology. In This sacred Earth: Religion, nature, environment, edited by Gottlieb, R. S.. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Haynes, K. E., and Whittington, D. (1981). International management of the Nile–Stage three?Geographical Review, 71(1), 17–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayton, R., and Utton, A. (1989). Transboundary groundwaters: The Bellagio draft treaty. Natural Resources Journal, 29(Summer), 663–720. Available at http://uttoncenter.unm.edu/pdfs/Bellagio_Draft_Treaty_E.pdf.Google Scholar
Healing, J. (2005). Development flows from vast water project. Sunday Times (South Africa), October 16.Google Scholar
Henry, N. (1991). Washington Post. Arid Botswana keeps its democracy afloat. March 21.Google Scholar
Hera, G., Sanchez-Fresneda, C., Esanola, J. M., and Pozo de Castro, M. (2002). The public water administration and the role of the Confederaciones Hidorgaphics in Spain, In Integrated water management at river basin level: An institutional development perspective, edited by Alearts, G. and LeMoigne, G.. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
Hewage, A. (1999). Potential in the Mahaweli river basin. River basin management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop, The Hague, October 27–29, 1999, edited by Mostert, E.. IHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31.Google Scholar
Heyns, P. (2005). Governance of a shared and contested resource: A case study of the Okavanga River basin. International Ecosystem Symposium on Ecosystem Governance, Kwa Maritane Bush Lodge, Pilansberg South Africa, October 10–13, CSIRO, Pretoria, RSA.Google Scholar
Hickey, E. (1992). Washington Times. Conflict is his peace of act. March 10, Section E.Google Scholar
Hiryi, R. (2002). River basin based water management in Tanzania. In Integrated water management at river basin level: An institutional development perspective, edited by Alearts, G. and LeMoigne, G.. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
Hoffman, J. (2001). Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin (ICPRB) briefing, October 9. Alexandria, VA: USACE, Institute for Water Resources.
Homer-Dixon, T. (1991). On the threshold: Environmental changes as causes of acute conflict. International Security, 16(2), 76–116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Homer-Dixon, T. (1994). Environmental scarcities and violent conflict: Evidence from cases. International Security, 19(1), 5–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Homer-Dixon, T. (1996). Strategies for studying causation in complex ecological–political systems. Journal of Environment and Development, 5(2), 132–148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Homer-Dixon, T. (1999). Environment, scarcity, and violence. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Hong Kong Water Supplies Department. (2006a). Revenues and pricing. Accessed at http://www.wsd.gov.hk/en/text/accessinfo/rpt9899/chapter12.htm. December 15, 2006.
Hong Kong Water Supplies Department. (2006b). Water from Guangdong. Accessed at http://www.wsd.gov.hk/en/html/water/hkwchn.htm on December 15.
Hori, H. (1993). Development of the Mekong River Basin, its problems and future prospects. Water International, 18(2), 110–115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Housen-Couriel, D. (1994). Some examples of cooperation in the management and use of international water resources. Jerusalem: Harry S. Truman Research Institute for the Advancement of Peace.Google Scholar
Howe, C. (1996). Water resources planning in a federation of states: Equity versus efficiency. Natural Resources Journal, 36(1), 29–36.Google Scholar
Howe, C. W., Schurmeier, D. R., and Shaw, W. D. Jr. (1986). Innovative approaches to water allocation: The potential for water markets. Water Resources Research, 22, 439–445.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hubbard, P. J. (1961). Origins of the TVA. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press.Google Scholar
Huddle, F. (1972). The Mekong Project: Opportunities and problems of regionalism. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.Google Scholar
Huisman, P., Jung, J., and Wieriks, K. (2000). Transboundary cooperation in shared river basin: Experiences from the Rhine, Meuse, and North Sea. In Management of shared river basins, edited by Savenije, Zaag, and Wolf, . Water Policy, 2, 83–97.Google Scholar
ICWE. (1992). Development issues for the 21st century. The Dublin Statement and Report of the Conference, Dublin, Ireland, January 26–31, 1992. Geneva: World Meteorological Organization.
ICPDR. (2002). List of major decisions of the ICPDR (from October 1998 onwards), ICPDR Homepage. Updated November 26, 2002. Available at http://www.icpdr/doccener/basicdocuments/listofmajordecisions.
IFAS. (2006). The executing agency of the international fund for the saving of the Aral Sea for implementation of the GEF and ASBP projects. Available at http://www.aral.uz.
Ilter, K. (2000). Analysts expect no drastic change in Turco–Syrian relations. Turkish Daily News, June 12.Google Scholar
Ingram, H. (1971). Patterns of politics in water resources development. Natural Resources Journal, 11 (January): 102–118.Google Scholar
Ingram, H. (1990). Water politics: Continuity and change. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.Google Scholar
Ingram, H. M., Laney, N. K., and Gillilan, D. M. (1995). Divided waters: Bridging the U.S.–Mexico border. Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona Press.Google Scholar
Ingram, H. M., and White, D. (1993). International Boundary and Water Commission: An institutional mismatch for resolving transboundary water problems. Natural Resources Journal, 33.Google Scholar
International Boundary and Water Commission. (2006). Available at http://www.ibwc.state.gov. Updated January 19, 2007.
International Joint Committee. (2006). Available at http://www.ijc.org. Updated January 16, 2007.
International Law Association. (1966). Helsinki rules on the uses of the waters of international rivers. Report of the Fifty-Second Conference, Helsinki, August 14–20, 1966, (London, 1967), pp. 484–532.
Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin. (2005). Available at http://www.potomacriver.org.
IRN, Nam Teum 2 Dam, Theun River, Laos: Beyond big Dams, an NGO guide to the WCD. Available at www.irn.org.
Isaac, J., and Selby, J. (1996). The Palestinian water crisis: Status projections and potential for resolution. Natural Resources Forum, 20, 17–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Islam, M. R. (1987). The Ganges water dispute: An appraisal of a third party settlement. Asian Survey, 27(8, August), 918–934.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
IUCN. (2003). The Senegal River: Release of an artificial flood to maintain traditional floodplain production systems. Water and Nature Initiative of the World Conservation Union-case studies. Gland: Switzerland.
IWMI. (2001). International water resources management in a river basin context: Institutional strategies for improving agricultural water management, Workshop Malang, East Java, Indonesia, January 15–19, 2001. Available at www.cgiar.org.
Iyer, R. (1999). Conflict Resolution: Three River Treaties. Economic and Political Week, Bombay, June 12, pp. 1510–1512.Google Scholar
Jacobson, G., and Hill, P. J. (1988). Hydrogeology and groundwater resources of Nauru Island, Central Pacific Ocean. Bureau of Mineral Resources Record NQ 1988/12, Australian Government.Google Scholar
Jägerskog, A. (2003). Why states cooperate over shared water: The water negotiations in the Jordan River basin. Sweden: Linköping University.Google Scholar
James, L. D. (1974). Man and water: Social sciences and management of water resources. Lexington: Lexington University Press, p. 47.Google Scholar
Jarvis, T. (2006). Transboundary groundwater: Geopolitical consequence, common sense, and the law of the hidden sea. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR.
Jarvis, T., Giordano, M., Puri, S., Matsumoto, K., and Wolf, A. (2006). International borders, ground water flow, and hydroschizophrenia. Ground Water, 43(5), 764–770.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, N., Revenga, D., and Echeverria, J. (2001). Managing water for people and nature. Science, 292(11 May), 1071–1072.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Johnson, R. (1999). The Colorado. River Basin Management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop, The Hague, October 27–29, 1999, edited by Mostert, E.. IIHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31.Google Scholar
Johnson, R. (2001). Redefining Brazil's water management system: The cases of the Paraiba do Sul and Curu River basins, COPPE Hydrology and Environmental Studies Laboratory, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, World Bank WorkshopWashington, DC, August 28.Google Scholar
Johnson, R. (2002). The river basin approaches in Brazil: The Pariba do Sul and the Ceara Cases. In Integrated water management at river basin level: An institutional development perspective, edited by Alearts, G. and LeMoigne, G.. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
Johore, Sultan of and Singapore City Council. (1927). The Agreement as to Certain Water Rights in Johore. December 5. Extracted from Administration Report of the Singapore Municipality for the Year 1927.
Johore (Government of the State of) and Singapore (the Public Utilities Board of). (1990). November 24.
Johore (Government of the State of) and Singapore (City Council of). (1961). The Tebrau and Scudai River water agreement. September 1.
Governments of Malaysia and Singapore (1962). The Johore River water agreement. September 29.
Jovanovic, D. (1985). Ethiopian interests in the division of the Nile river waters. Water International, 10(2, June), 82–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jovanovic, D. (1986a). Response to discussion by M. M. A. Shahin of the paper “Ethiopian interests in the division of the Nile River waters.”Water International, 11(1, March), 20–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jovanovic, D. (1986b). Response to discussion of the paper “Ethiopian interests in the division of the Nile River waters.”Water International, 11(2, June), 89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jung, C. G. (1968). Analytical psychology: Its theory and practice. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Just, R., and Netanyahu, S. (editors). (1998). Conflict and cooperation on trans-boundary water resources. Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaczmark, B. (2002). The Organization of Water Management with the Agencies de l'eau. In Integrated water management at river basin level: An institutional development perspective, edited by Alearts, G. and LeMoigne, G.. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
Kaijser, A. (2002). System building from below: Institutional change in Dutch water control systems, Technology and Culture, 43(3, July), 521–548.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kally, E. (1989). The potential for cooperation in water projects in the Middle East at peace. In Economic cooperation in the Middle East, edited by Fishelson, G.. Boulder: Westview Press, pp. 303–326.Google Scholar
Kalter, R. (1971). Criteria for federal evaluation of resources investments. Washington, DC: U.S. Water Resources Council.Google Scholar
Kardoss, L. (1999). The Danube. River Basin Management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop, The Hague, October 27–29, 1999, edited by Mostert, E.. IHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31.Google Scholar
Kattelmann, R. (1990). Conflicts and cooperation over floods in the Himalaya–Ganges region. Water International, 15(4), 189–194.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaufman, E. (2002). Innovative problem-solving workshops. In Second track/citizens' diplomacy: Concepts and techniques for conflict transformation, edited by Davies, J. and Kaufman, E.. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, pp. 171–247.Google Scholar
Kenney, D. S. (1995). Institutional options for the Colorado River. Journal of the American Water Resources Association, 31(5), 837–850.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kenney, D. (editor). (2005). In search of sustainable water management. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishing.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kenney, D. S., and Lord, W. B. (1994). Coordination mechanisms for the control of interstate water resources: A synthesis and review of the literature. Task 2 Report for the ACT–ACF Coordination Mechanism Study, Institute for Water Resources, USACE, Alexandria, VA, July 1994.Google Scholar
Kenworthy, T. (1996). Washington Post. High Tide in the Grand Canyon. March 27, A17.Google Scholar
Keohane, R. O. (1989). International institutions and state power. Boulder: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Khan, M. Y. (1990). Boundary water conflict between India and Pakistan. Water International, 15(4), 1995–1999.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khan, T. (1994). Challenges facing the management and sharing of the Ganges. Transboundary Resource Report. Spring 1994.Google Scholar
Khassawneh, A. (1995). The International Law Commission and Middle East waters. In Water in the Middle East: Legal, political, and commercial implications, edited by Allan, J. A. and Mallat, C.. London and New York: Tauris Academic Studies, pp. 21–28.Google Scholar
Khlobystov, V. (1999). North Caucasus Region. River Basin Management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop, The Hague, October 27–29, 1999, edited by Mostert, E.. IHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31.Google Scholar
Kibaroğlu, A., and Unver, Olcay I. H. (2000). An institutional framework for facilitating cooperation in the Euphrates–Tigris River basin. International Negotiation, 5(2), 311–330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kibaroğlu, A. (2002a). Building a regime for the waters of the Euphrates–Tigris River basin. The Netherlands: Kluwer Law International.Google Scholar
Kibaroğlu, A. (2002b). Management and allocation of the waters of the Euphrates–Tigris basin: Lessons drawn from global experiences. Ankara: Bilkent University.Google Scholar
Kibaroğlu, A. (2002c). Transboundary water issues in the Euphrates–Tigris river basin: Prospects for cooperation.Google Scholar
Kirmani, S. S. (1990). Water, peace and conflict management: The experience of the Indus and Mekong river basins. Water International, 15(4, December), 200–205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kliot, N. (1995). Building a legal regime for the Jordan–Yarmouk river system: Lessons from other international rivers. In The peaceful management of transboundary resources, edited by Blake, G., Hildesley, W., Pratt, M., Ridley, R., and Schofield, C.. London and Dordrecht: Graham and Trotman/Martinus Nijhoff, pp. 187–202.Google Scholar
Kliot, N., Shmueli, D., and Shamir, U. (1999). Institutional frameworks for the management of transboundary water resources, Vols. 1–2, Technion, Israel: Water Research Institute.Google Scholar
Kolars, J. (1992). Trickle of hope: Negotiating water rights is critical to peace in the Middle East. Sciences, 32 (6), 16–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kolars, J., and Mitchell, W. (1991). The Euphrates River and the Southeast Anatolia Development Project. Carbondale and Edwardsville: Southern Illinois University Press.Google Scholar
Kriesberg, L. (1988). Strategies of negotiating agreements: Arab–Israeli and American–Soviet cases. Negotiation Journal, January, 19–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krishna, R. (1995). International watercourses: World Bank experience and policy. In Water in the Middle East: Legal, political, and commercial implications, edited by Allan, J. A. and Mallat, C.. London and New York: Tauris Academic Studies, pp. 29–54.Google Scholar
Krutilla, J. V. (1969). The Columbia River Treaty – The economics of an international river basin development. Baltimore, MD: Published for the Resources for the Future by John Hopkins Press.Google Scholar
Kulshreshtha, S. N. (1993). World water resources and regional vulnerability: Impact of future changes. Laxenburg, Austria: IIASA, RR-93-10.Google Scholar
Kultida, S. (2003). Cabinet gives green light for ratification of power accord. International Rivers Network, Available at http://www.irn.org/programs/mekong/030605.ratification.html. Updated June 5, 2003.Google Scholar
Kyem, Kwaku P. A. (2004). Of intractable conflicts and participatory GIS applications: The search for consensus amidst competing claims and institutional demands. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 94(1), 37–57.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lammers, O., Moore, D., and Preakle, K. (1994). Considering the Hidrovia: A preliminary report on the status of the proposed Paraguay/Parana waterway project. Working Paper 3. Berkley CA: International Rivers Network, July.Google Scholar
Lancaster, T. (1990). The econometric analysis of transition data. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Langton, S. (1999). Participatory Processes in Water Management (PPWM): Proceedings of the Satellite Conference to the World Conference on Science International conference on participatory processes in water management. June 28–30, 1999. Budapest, Hungary, edited by Gayer, J.. UNESCO-IHP/IA2P/IWRA. Paris: UNESCO-IHP-V.Google Scholar
Lanna, A. E. (2003). Water charges in Brazil: Implementation and perspectives. In Water pricing and public-private partnership in the Americas. Washington, D.C: Sustainable Development Department of the Inter-American Development Bank.Google Scholar
Lanz, K., and Scheuer, S. (2000). EEB handbook on EU water policy under the Water Framework Directive, Brussels: European Environmental Bureau.Google Scholar
Lasswell, H. (1971). A preview of policy sciences. New York: American Elsevier.Google Scholar
Laylin, J., and Bianchi, R. (1959). The role of adjudication in international river disputes: The Lake Lanoux case. American Journal of International Law, 53, 30–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lederach, J. P. (1995). Preparing for peace: Conflict transformation across cultures. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press.Google Scholar
Lee, K. N. (1995). Compass and gyroscope: Integrating science and politics for the environment. Washington, DC: Island Press.Google Scholar
Lee, D. J., and Dinar, A. (1995). Review of integrated approaches to river basin planning, development and management. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper WPS 1446, Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
Lees, S. H. (1973). Hydraulic development as a process of response. Human Ecology, 2(November), 159–175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Le-Huu, T., and Nguyen-Duc, L. (2003). Mekong Case Study. Paris: UNESCO IHP Technical Documents in Hydrology, PCCP Series No. 10.Google Scholar
Leitman, S. (2005). Negotiations of a water allocation formula for the Apalachicola–Chattahoochee–Flint basin. In Adaptive governance, edited by Scholz, J. T. and Stifftel, B.. Washington, DC: Resources for the Future, pp. 74–88.Google Scholar
LeMarquand, D. (1976). Politics of international river basin cooperation and management. Natural Resources Journal, 16, 883–901.Google Scholar
LeMarquand, D. G. (1977). International rivers: The politics of cooperation. Vancouver: University of British Columbia, Westwater Research Centre.Google Scholar
LeMarquand, D. G. (1990). International development of the Senegal River. Water International, 15, 223–230.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
LeMarquand, D. (1993). The international joint commission and changing Canada–United States boundary relations. Natural Resources Journal, 33(1), 59–92.Google Scholar
Le Monde Diplomatique. (2000). Available at http://mondediplo.com/2000/02/10boucaud?var_recherche=salween. Updated February 2000.
Leopold, A. (1949). A Sand County almanac. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Lesotho and South Africa, Governments of. (1986). Treaty on the Lesotho Highlands Water Project between the Government of the Republic of South Africa and the Government of the Kingdom of Lesotho.
Lesotho Highlands Development Authority. (2004). Lesotho Highlands Water Project. Accessed at http://www.lhwp.org.ls/news/default.htm. Updated October 11.
Lesotho Highlands Development Authority. (2006). Overview of the Lesotho Highlands Water Project. Accessed at http://www.lhwp.org.ls/overview/default.htm December 19.
Lesotho Highlands Water Project. (2002). Phase I, Policy for instream flow requirements, Available at http://www.lhwp.org.ls.
Leuchtenburg, W. E. (1952). Roosevelt, Norris and the “Seven Little TVAs”. Journal of Politics, 14, 418–441.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewicki, R. J., and Litterer, J. A. (1985). Negotiation. Homewood, IL: Irwin.Google Scholar
Lewicki, R., Litterer, J., Minton, J., and Saunders, D. (1994). Negotiation. Boston: Irwin.Google Scholar
Li, R. (1999). Yellow River. River Basin Management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop, The Hague, October 27–29, 1999, edited by E. Mostert. IHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31.Google Scholar
Libiszewski, S. (1995). Water disputes in the Jordan basin region and their role in the resolution of the Arab–Israeli conflict. Occasional Paper, 13. Zurich: Center for Security Studies and Conflict Research.Google Scholar
Lincoln, W. F. (1986). The course in collaborative negotiations. Denver, CO: Denver National Center for Dispute Resolution.Google Scholar
Linnerooth-Bayer, J. (1986). Negotiated river basin management: Implementing the Danube Declaration. In Management of International River Basin Conflicts, edited by Vlachos, E., Webb, A., and Murphy, I.. Proceedings of a Workshop held at the Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, Laxenberg, Austria, September 22–25, 1986.Google Scholar
Linnerooth-Bayer, J. (1993). Current Danube River Events and Issues. Transboundary Resource Report, Winter.Google Scholar
Linnerooth-Bayer, J. (1994). The Danube River basin: International cooperation for sustainable development. Transboundary Resource Report, 8 (6) Spring.Google Scholar
Llamas, M. R., and Custodio, E. (editors). (2002). Intensive use of groundwater. Challenges and opportunities. The Netherlands: Balkema Publishers.Google Scholar
London, J. B., and Miley, H. W. Jr. (1990). The interbasin transfer of water: An issue of efficiency and equity. Water International, 15, 231–235.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lonergan, S., Gustavson, K., and Carter, B. (2000). The index of human insecurity. AVISO Bulletin, 6, Ottowa, ON: GECHS, pp. 1–11.Google Scholar
Lopez, A. (2004). Environmental conflicts and regional cooperation in the Lempa River Basin: The role of the Trifinio Plan as a regional institution. EDSP Working Paper No. 2, Environment, Development, and Sustainable Peace Initiative.Google Scholar
Lowi, M. (1993). Water and power: The politics of a scarce resource in the Jordan River basin. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lowi, M., and Rothman, J. (1993). Arabs and Israelis: The Jordan River. In Culture and negotiation: The resolution of water disputes, edited by Faure, G. O. and Rubin, J. Z.. London: Sage Publications, pp. 156–175.Google Scholar
MacChesney, B. (1959). Judicial decisions: Lake Lanoux case. American Journal of International Law, 53, 156–171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacDonnell, L. J. (1988). Natural resources dispute resolution: An overview. Natural Resources Journal, 28(1), 5–20.Google Scholar
Main, Chas. Inc, T.. (1953). The unified development of the water resources of the Jordan Valley region. Knoxville: Tennessee Valley Authority.Google Scholar
Mageed, Y. (1994). The Nile Basin: Lessons from the past. In International waters of the Middle East, edited by Biswas, A.. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Mandel, R. (1992). Sources of international river basin disputes. Conflict Quarterly, 12(4, Fall), 25–56.Google Scholar
Margat, J. (1989). The sharing of common water resources in the European Community (EC). Water International, 14, 59–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, R. (1956). TVA the first twenty years. Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press.Google Scholar
Martin, R. (1960). River basin administration and the Delaware. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press.Google Scholar
Marty, F. (2001). Managing international rivers: Problems, politics, and institutions. Bern: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Matsumoto, K. (2002). Transboundary groundwater and international law: Past practices and current implications. Unpublished Master's thesis, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR. Available at http://www.transboundarywaters.orst.edu/publications/Matsumoto_abstract.htm.
Matthews, O. P. (1984). Water resources: Geography and law. Washington, DC: Association of American Geographers.Google Scholar
McCaffrey, S. C. (1996a). An assessment of the work of the International Law Commission. Natural Resources Journal, 36(2), 297–318.Google Scholar
McCaffrey, S. C. (1996b). The Harmon Doctrine one hundred years later: Buried, not praised. Natural Resources Journal, 36(3), 549–590.Google Scholar
McCaffrey, S. (1997). Water scarcity: Institutional and legal responses. In The scarcity of water: Emerging legal and political responses, edited by Brans, E. H. P., Haan, E. S., Nollkaemper, A., and Rinzema, J.. The Hague: Kluwer Law International, pp. 43–58.Google Scholar
McCaffrey, S. (1999). International groundwater law: Evolution and context, Groundwater: Legal and Policy Perspectives, Proceedings of a World Bank Seminar. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
McCaffrey, S. (2001a). The contribution of the UN convention on the law of the non-navigational uses of international watercourses. International Journal Global Environmental Issues, 1(3/4), 250–263.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCaffrey, S. (2001b). The law of international watercourses: Non-navigational uses, 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
McCaffrey, S. (2003). The need for flexibility in freshwater treaty regimes. Natural Resources Forum, 27(22), 156–163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McClurg, S., and Sudeman, R. S. (2003). Public and stakeholder education to improve groundwater management. In Intensive use of Groundwater, Challenges and Opportunities, edited by Llama, R. and Custodio, E.. Lisse, The Netherlands: A. A. Balkema.Google Scholar
McDonald, A. (1988). International river basin negotiations: Building a data base of illustrative successes. October WP HH 096. Luxembourg, Austria: International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis.Google Scholar
McKay, J. M. (2005). Water institutional reform in Australia. Water Policy, 7(2), 35–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McKinney, D. C. (1997) Sustainable water management in the Aral Sea basin. Water Resources Update, Universities Council on Water Resources, 102, Winter, 14–24.Google Scholar
McKinney, D. C. (2004). Cooperative management of transboundary water resources in Central Asia. In In the tracks of Tamerlane – Central Asia's path into the 21st Century, edited by Burghart, D. and Sabonis-Helf, T.. Washington DC: National Defense University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Medzini, A., and Wolf, A. (2004). Towards a Middle East at peace: Hidden issues in Arab–Israeli hydropolitics. International Journal of Water Resources Development, 20(2), 193–204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mehta, J. (1986). The Indus water treaty. In The management of international river basin conflicts, edited by Vlachos, E., Webb, A., and Murphy, I. L.. Washington, DC: Graduate Program in Science, Technology, and Public Policy, George Washington University.Google Scholar
Mejia, A., Zayas, Lopez L. A., Tafflesse, S., and Amore, L. (2004). The Guaraní Aquifer system: A key element for an integrated water resources management strategy in La Plata basin, Powerpoint Presentation: Diving in to implementation, Slide 8. World Bank, World Water Week.Google Scholar
Mekong River Commission. (1999). River Basin Management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop, The Hague, October 27–29, 1999, edited by Mostert, E.. IHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31.Google Scholar
Mekong River Commission. (2007). Mekong River Commission. Available at http://www.mrcmekong.org.
Mestre, E. (2001). The design of River Basin Organization in Mexico. River Basin Management Workshop, World Bank, Washington, DC, August 28, 2001.Google Scholar
Mestre, E. (2002). The Lerma Chapala. In Integrated water management at river basin level: An institutional development perspective, edited by Alearts, G. and LeMoigne, G.. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
Mestre, E. (2004). Training course in building river basin organizations, for the World Bank, Abuja Nigeria, June 2004.Google Scholar
Meyer, T. A. (1987). Innovative approaches to transportation of water by tanker. Non-Conventional Water Resources Use in Developing Countries, Natural Resources/Water Series NP 22, United Nations, pp. 119–135.Google Scholar
Middle East Desalination Research Center. (2007). Available at http://www.medrc.org. Updated January 19, 2007.
Middle East Newsfile. (1998). OIC offers to mediate between Turkey, Syria. October 18.
Mideast Mirror. (1997). Turks attacks northern Iraq after renewing mandate of U.S.-led force. 11(2), January 2.
Mideast Mirror. (1998). Turkey-Syria crisis: Saudis to join mediation efforts. 12(195), October 9.
Mideast Mirror. (2000). Turkey's “water weapon.” 14(61), March 29.
Milich, L., and Varady, R. G. (1999). Openness, sustainability, and public participation: New designs for transboundary river basin institutions. Journal of Environment and Development, 8(3), 258–306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, C. (editor). (2001). Fluid arguments: Five centuries of western water conflict. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.Google Scholar
Millington, P. (2002). The Murray Darling. In Integrated water management at river basin level: An institutional development perspective, edited by Alearts, G. and LeMoigne, G.. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
Mirza, M. (2003). The Ganges water-sharing treaty: Risk analysis of the negotiated discharge. International Journal of Water, 2(1), 57–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitrany, D. (1975). The functional theory of politics. New York: St. Martin's Press.Google Scholar
Mnookin, R. H., Peppet, S. R., and Tulumello, A. S. (2000). Beyond winning: Negotiating to create value in deals and disputes. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press.Google Scholar
Moench, M. (2004). Groundwater: The challenge of monitoring and management. In The world's water 2004–2005, edited by Gleick, P. H.. Washington, DC: Island Press, pp. 79–100.Google Scholar
Molle, F. (2004). Defining water rights: By prescription or negotiation?Water Policy, 6, 207–227.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Montville, J., and Priscoli, Delli J. (1994). Report on preventing Slovak–Hungarian ethnic violence. Washington, DC: Center for Strategic and International Studies.Google Scholar
Moore, C. (1985). Executive training course in conflict management, edited by Priscoli, J. Delli and Moore, C.. Alexandria, VA: Institute for Water Resources, USACE.Google Scholar
Moore, C. W. (1986). The mediation process: Practical strategies for resolving conflict. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Moore, C. (1991). Corps of Engineers uses mediation to settle hydropower dispute. ADR Case Study No. 6, September. Alexandria and Ft. Belvoir, VA: IWR USACE.Google Scholar
Moore, C. W. (2003). The mediation process: Practical strategies for resolving conflict, 3rd ed. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Moore, C., and Priscoli, Delli J. (editors). (1989). Alternative dispute resolution (ADR) procedures. Boulder, CO: CDR Associates (for the Executive Seminar for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers).Google Scholar
Morgan, T. (2002). Turkey to pump water to Cyprus. BBC World News. January 11.Google Scholar
Morris, C. (2000). Turkey to dip into water market. BBC WorldNews. March 28.Google Scholar
Mostert, E, Beek, E., Bouman, N. W.Hey, M E., Savenije, H. H. G., and Thissen, W. A. H. (editors). (1999). River Basin Management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop, The Hague, October 27–29, 1999, IHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31. Paris: UNESCO.Google Scholar
Mostert, E. (2003). The challenge of public participation. World Policy, 5, 179–197.Google Scholar
Muckleston, K. (2003). International management in the Columbia River system. Paris: UNESCO IHP Technical Documents in Hydrology, PCCP Series No. 12.Google Scholar
Mumme, S. (2000). Minute 242 and beyond: Challenges and opportunities for managing transboundary groundwater on the Mexico-United States border. Natural Resources Journal, 40 (2), Spring, pp. 341–378.Google Scholar
Mumme, S. (2004). Advancing binational cooperation in the transboundary aquifer management on the U.S.–Mexico Border. Paper presented at Groundwater in the West Conference, University of Colorado at Boulder.Google Scholar
Munich Re Group. (2000). Topics, 2000: Natural catastrophes, the current position. Münchener Rückversicherung-Gesellschaft, Munich, Germany. Available at http://www.munichre.com/publications/302-02354_en.pdf?rdm=80335.
Murray–Darling Basin Commission. (2007). Available at http://www.mdbc.gov.au. Updated January 20, 2007.
Mutayoba, W., Saidi, F., and Hirji, R. (2001). The development of river basin management in Tanzania: Early experience and lessons. World Bank Symposium, August 28, 2001.Google Scholar
Myers, N. (1993). Ultimate security: The environmental basis of political stability. New York: Norton.Google Scholar
Nachtnebel, H. P. (1999). The Danube. River Basin Management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop. The Hague, October 27–29, 1999, edited by Mostert, E.. IHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31.Google Scholar
Nachtnebel, H. P. (2002). The Danube Commission and its environmental program. In Integrated water management at river basin level: An institutional development perspective, edited by Alearts, G. and LeMoigne, G.. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
Naff, T., and Dellapenna, J. (2002). Can there be confluence? A comparative consideration of Western and Islamic fresh water law. Water policy, 4, 465–489.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Naff, T., and Matson, R. (1984). Water in the Middle East: Conflict or cooperation. Boulder and London: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Nagle, W. J., and Ghose, S. (1990). Community participation in World Bank supported projects. Strategic Planning and Review Department Discussion Paper 8. Washington, DC: World Bank, p. 4.Google Scholar
Nagy, L. (1987). Perspective of cooperation on international river basins. International Symposium on Water for the Future, Rome, 6–11 April, 1987, pp. 343–353.Google Scholar
Nakayama, M. (1997). Successes and failures of international organizations in dealing with international waters. International Journal of Water Resources Development, 13(3), 367–382.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nakayama, M. (editor). (2003). International waters in Southern Africa. Tokyo: United Nations University Press.Google Scholar
Nandalal, K. D. W., and Simonovic, S. P. (2003). State-of-the-art report on systems analysis methods for resolution of conflicts in water resources management. Paris: UNESCO IHP Technical Documents in Hydrology, PCCP Series No. 4.Google Scholar
Natchkov, I. (2002). The Danube Commission and its environmental program. In Integrated water management at river basin level: An institutional development perspective, edited by Alearts, G. and LeMoigne, G.. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
National Academy of Sciences. (1968). Water and choice in the Colorado basin: An example of alternatives in water management. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA); 42 U.S.C. 4321–4347. Available at http://ceq.eh.doe.gov/nepa/regs/nepa/nepaeqia.htm.
Natural Resources Law Center. (1997). The watershed source book. Boulder: University of Colorado.
Newfoundland, Statutes of. (1999). An act to provide for the conservation, protection, wise use and management of the water resources of the province.
News24.com. (2005). Thousands flee water fights. January 24, 2005. Available at http://www.news24.com/News24/Africa/News/0,6119,2-11-1447_1651487,00.html.
Ng, I. (2001). Tough talks, then progress on KL pact. Straits Times, September 5.Google Scholar
Ng, T. (2006). HK, Guangdong sign water supply deal. China Daily. April 4.Google Scholar
Nichols, J. (1974). The Milagro beanfield war: A novel. New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston.Google Scholar
Nicol, A. (2003). The Nile: Moving beyond cooperation. Paris: UNESCO IHP Technical Documents in Hydrology, PCCP Series No. 16.Google Scholar
Niem, N. T. (2000). Strategy for flood preparedness and mitigation in Vietnam. International European-Asian Workshop, Ecosystems and Floods 2000, Hanoi Vietnam, FAO Rome, June 27–29.Google Scholar
Nile Basin Organization. (1994). Nile Basin initiative. In International waters of the Middle East. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Available at www.nilebasin.org.
Nishat, A., and Pasha, M. (2001). A review of the Ganges Treaty of 1996. Globalization and Water Resources Management: The Changing Values of Water. AWRA/IWLRI – University of Dundee International Speciality Conference. August 6–8.Google Scholar
Nitze, W. (1991). Greenhouse warming: Negotiating a global regime. Washington, DC: World Resources Institute.Google Scholar
NUS Consulting Group. (2005). 2004–2005 international water report and cost survey. New York: NUS Consulting Group.
NUS Consulting Group. (2006). 2005–2006 international Water Report and Cost Survey. New York: NUS Consulting Group.
OAC. (1999). River basin management in Nigeria, In River Basin Management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop, The Hague, October 27–29, 1999, edited by Mostert, E.. IHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31.Google Scholar
Officer, L. H., and Williamson, S. H. (2006). Computing “real value” over time with a conversion between U.K. Pounds and U.S. Dollars, 1830–2005, MeasuringWorth.com, August.Google Scholar
O'Hara, S. (editor). (2003). Drop by drop: Water management in the Southern Caucuses and Central Asia. Open Society Institute: Local Government and Public Service Reform Initiative, Budapest.Google Scholar
Oleson, J. P. (1984). Greek and Roman mechanical water-lifting devices: The history of a technology. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Oliver, J. I. (1992). French river basin management. Draft Water Policy Paper, World Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Omernik, J. M. (2003). The misuse of hydrologic unit maps for extrapolation, reporting, and ecosystem management. Journal of the American Water Resources Association, 39, 563–573.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Omernik, J. M., and Bailey, R. G. (1997). Distinguishing between watersheds and ecoregions. Journal of the American Water Resources Association, 33, 1–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Onn, L. P. (2005). Water management issues in Singapore. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies Paper presented at Water in Mainland Southeast Asia Conference. November 29–December 2. Siem Reap, Cambodia.Google Scholar
Onta, P. R., Gupta, A. D., and Loof, R. (1996). Potential water resources development in the Salween River basin. In Asian international waters: From Ganges–Brahmaputra to Mekong, edited by Biswas, A. K. and Hashimoto, T.. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Organization for the Development of the Senegal River (1972). Senegal River Basin, Guinea, Mali, Mauritania, Senegal, pilot case studies, A focus on real-world examples, Senegal, Mali and Mauritania; pp. 448–461.
Organization of American States (OAS). (2000). Strategic action program for the Bermejo Bination River basin, Executive Summary, Washington DC, March 2000.
Organization of American States (OAS). (2001). InterAmercian dialogue on water management, Foz do Iguacu, Parana, Brasil, September 2–6, 2001.
Organization of American States (OAS). (2004). Moving forward the water agenda: Issues to consider in Latin America, Unit for Sustainable Development and Environment, Policy Series May (2), p. 1.
Ostrom, E. (1990). Governing the commons: The evolution of institutions for collective action. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ostrom, E. (1992). The rudiments of a theory of the origins, survival, and performance of common-property institutions. In Making the commons work: Theory, practice and policy, edited by Bromley, D. W.. San Francisco: ICS Press.Google Scholar
Ostrom, V. (1971). Institutional arrangement for water resources development. Arlington, VA: National Water Commission.Google Scholar
Ouyahia, M. A. (2006). Public–private partnerships for funding municipal drinking water infrastructure: What are the challenges? Government of Canada Discussion Paper. PRI Project, Sustainable Development.Google Scholar
Ozawa, C., and Susskind, L. (1985). Mediating science-intensive policy disputes. Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 5(1), 23–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Page, B. (2003). Has widening participation in decision-making influenced water policy in the UK?Water Policy, 5, 313–329.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Painter, A. (1995). Resolving environmental conflicts through mediation. In Water quantity/quality management and conflict resolution: Institutions, processes and economic analyses, edited by Dinar, A. and Loehman, E. T.. Westport, CT: Praeger.Google Scholar
Paisley, R. (2003). Adversaries into partners: International water law and the equitable sharing of downstream benefits. Melbourne Journal of International Law, 3, 280–300.Google Scholar
Palmer, R., Werick, W. J., MacEwan, A., and Woods, A. W. (1999). Modeling water resources opportunities, challenges, and trade-offs: The use of shared vision modeling for negotiation and conflict resolution. Preparing for the 21st Century, Proceedings of the 26th Annual Water Resource Planning and Management Conference, ASCE, Reston, VA.Google Scholar
Paoletto, G., and Uitto, J. I. (1996). The Salween River: Is international development possible?Asia Pacific Viewpoint, 37(3, December), 269–282.Google Scholar
Paul, S. (1987). Community participation in development projects: The World Bank experience. World Bank Discussion Paper, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Paul, S. (1991). The Bank's work on institutional development in sectors, emerging tasks, and challenges. World Bank Country Economics Department, Public Sector Management and Private Sector Development Division, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Paul, T. V. (1994). Asymmetric conflicts: War initiation by weaker powers. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peabody, N. S. III. (editor). (1991). Water policy innovations in California: Water resources management in a closing water supply system. Discussion paper No. 2, Winrock International Institute for Agriculture Development, Water Resource and Irrigation Policy Program, Center for Economic Policy Studies, December 1991.Google Scholar
Pearce, F. (2003). Conflict Looms over India's Colossal River Plan. New Scientist. Available at http://www.newscientist.com. Updated January 19, 2007.Google Scholar
Permanent Court of Arbitration. (1991). New directions. The Hague.
Peters, J. (1994). Building bridges: The Arab–Israeli multilateral talks. London: Royal Institute of International Affairs.Google Scholar
Plan Director Global Binacional de Protección (1995). Prevención de Inundaciones y Aprovechamiento de los Recursos del Lago Titicaca, Río Desaguadero, Lago Poopo y Lago Salar de Coipasa (Sistema TDPS). Comisión de las Comunidades Europeas, Repúblicas de Peru y Bolivia.
Postel, S., and Wolf, A.. (2001). Dehydrating conflict. Foreign Policy (September/October), 60–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Postel, S. (1992). Last oasis: Facing water scarcity. New York: Norton.Google Scholar
Postel, S. (1999). Pillar of sand: Can the irrigation miracle last?New York: Norton.Google Scholar
Pritchett, C. H. (1943). The Tennessee Valley Authority. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.Google Scholar
Public Awareness and Water Conservation. (2007). Water Care. Available at www.watercare.org. Updated January 19, 2007.
Puri, S. (2003). Transboundary aquifer resources: International water law and hydrogeological uncertainty. Water International, 28(2), 276–279.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Puri, S., and El Naser, H. (2002). Intensive use of groundwater in transboundary aquifers. In Intensive use of groundwater, edited by Llamas, M. R. and Custudio, E.Balkema: The Netherlands, pp. 415–438.Google Scholar
Puri, S., Gaines, L., Wolf, A., and Jarvis, T. (2002). Lessons from intensively used transboundary river basin agreements for transboundary aquifers. Proceedings of the Symposium on Intensive Use of Groundwater: Challenges and Opportunities, Valencia, Spain, December 10–14, 2002.Google Scholar
Puri, S., Appelgren, B., Arnold, G., Aureli, A., Burchi, S., Burke, J., Margat, J., Pallas, P., and Igel, W. (2001). Internationally shared (transboundary) aquifer resources management, their significance and sustainable management: A framework document. IHP-VI, International Hydrological Programme, Non-Serial Publications in Hydrology SC-2001/WS/40 Paris, France: UNESCO.Google Scholar
Racellis, M. (1992). People's participation: The use of UNICEFs experience. World Bank Workshop on Participatory Development, Washington, DC, February 26–27, 1992.Google Scholar
Radosevich, G., and Olson, D. (2002). Institutional change for managing the Tarim River basin China. In Integrated water management at river basin level: An institutional development perspective, edited by Alearts, G. and LeMoigne, G.. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
Raiffa, H. (1982). The art and science of negotiation. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press.Google Scholar
Ramu, K., and Herman, T. (2002). River basin management corporation: An Indonesian approach. In Integrated water management at river basin level: An institutional development perspective, edited by Alearts, G. and LeMoigne, G.. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
Rangeley, W., and Kirmani, S. (1992). International inland waters: Concepts for a more proactive role for the World Bank. Draft Background paper, Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
Raskin, P. D., Hansen, E., and Margolis, R. M. (1996). Water and sustainability global patterns and long-range problems. Natural Resources Forum, 20(1), 1–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ravnborg, H. Munk (2004). From water “wars” to water “riots”? Lessons about trans-boundary water-related conflict and cooperation. In Water and conflict conflict prevention and mitigation in water resources management, edited by Ravnborg, H. Munk. Copenhagen: Danish Institute for International Studies (DIIS) Report 2004, p. 2.Google Scholar
REC Caucasus (2001). News from REC Caucus: Water. Regional Environment Centre for the Caucasus, August (3).
Reisner, M. (1986). Cadillac Desert: The American West and its disappearing water. New York: Viking.Google Scholar
Remans, W. (1995). Water and war. Humantäres Völkerrecht, 8(1), 1–14.Google Scholar
Rende, M. (2004). Water transfer from Turkey to water stressed countries in the Middle East. Paper presented at the Water for Life in the Middle East 2nd Israeli–Palestinian International Conference, October 10–14. Turkey.Google Scholar
Reuss, M. (editor). (2002) Learning from the Dutch: Technology, management, and water resources development. Technology and Culture, 43(3, July), 465–472.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Revollo, M. (2001). Case report: Management issues in the Lake Titicaca and Lake Poopo system: Importance of developing a water budget. Lakes and Reservoirs: Research and Management, 6(3), 225.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Revollo, M., Cruz, M., and Rivero, A. (2003). Lake Titicaca. Lake Basin Management Initiative. Available at http://www.worldlakes.org/lakedetails.asp?lakeid=8592. Updated January 19, 2007.Google Scholar
Rinaudo, J. D. (2002). Corruption and allocation of water: The case of public irrigation in Pakistan. Water Policy, 4, 405–422.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ringler, C. (2001). Optimal allocation and use of water resources in the Mekong River basin: Multicountry and intersectoral analyses. Development Economics and Policy, 20. Peter Lang. GmbH. Europaischer Verlag der Wissenschapften, Frankfurt aim Main.Google Scholar
Rogers, P. (1969). A game theory approach to the problems of international river basins. Water Resources Research, 5(4), 49–760.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogers, P. (1991). International river basins: Pervasive unidirectional externalities. Presented at a conference on The Economics of Transnational Commons, Universita di Siena, Italy, April 25–27.Google Scholar
Rogers, P. (1992a). Comprehensive water resources management: A concept paper. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
Rogers, P. (1992b). A note on economic benefits of cooperation on international rivers development, draft memo, World Bank Water Policy Study. World Bank: Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Rogers, P. (1993). The value of cooperation in resolving international river basin disputes. Natural Resources Forum, (May), 117–131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogers, P. (2002). Water governance in Latin America and the Caribbean. Washington DC: Inter American Development Bank, February.Google Scholar
Ronteltap, M., Rieckermann, J., and Daebel, H. (2004). Management efforts at Lake Titicaca. The science and politics of international freshwater management. Zurich: Swiss Federal Institute of Technology.Google Scholar
Rosegrant, M. W., and Cai, X. (2002). Global water demand and supply projections, Part 2. Results and prospects to 2025. Water International, 27(2), 170–182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosenne, S. (1995). The World Court. What it is and how it works. Legal aspects of international organization, Bd. 16. Dordrecht, the Netherlands: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.Google Scholar
Roth, E. (2001). Water pricing in the EU: A review. Publication 2001/002, Brussels: European Environmental Bureau.Google Scholar
Rothfelder, J. (2003). Water rights, conflict, and culture. Water Resources Impact, 5(2), 19–21.Google Scholar
Rothman, J. (1989). Supplementing tradition: A theoretical and practical typology for international conflict management. Negotiation Journal, 5(3).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rothman, J. (1995). Pre-Negotiation in water disputes: Where culture is core. Cultural Survival Quarterly, 19(3), 19–22.Google Scholar
Rothman, J. (1997). Resolving Identity-Based Conflicts in Nations, Organizations, and Communities. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Rudquist, A. (1992). SIDA's experience with popular participation. World Bank workshop on participatory development, Washington, DC, February 26–27, 1992.Google Scholar
Sabatier, P. A., Focht, W., Lubell, M., and Trachtenberg, Z. (editors). (2005). Swimming upstream: Collaborative approaches to watershed management. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Sadoff, C. W., and Grey, D. (2002). Beyond the river: The benefits of cooperation on international rivers. Water Policy, 4(5), 389–404.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sadoff, C. W., and Grey, D. (2005). Cooperation on international rivers: A continuum for securing and sharing benefits. Water International, 30(4, December), 420–427.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sadria, M. (1998). Iranian strategies in central Asia. In Central eurasian water crisis: Caspian, Aral and Dead Seas, edited by Kobori, and Glantz, Tokyo, New York, Paris: United Nations University Press.Google Scholar
Saleth, R. M., and Dinar, A. (1998). Institutional response to water challenge: A cross country perspective. Report to the Water Sector Performance Studies, World Bank, March 25, 1998.Google Scholar
Saleth, R. M., and Dinar, A. (2005). Water institutional reforms: Theory and practice. Water Policy, 7, 1–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salman, L. (1989). Benefitting assessments: An approach described. World Bank Workshop on Participatory Development, Washington, DC, February 26–27, 1992.Google Scholar
Salman, S. M. A., and Boisson, Chazournes L., (editors). (1998). International watercourses: Enhancing cooperation and managing conflict. Washington, DC: World Bank, Technical Paper No. 414.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salman, S. M. A., and Uprety, K. (2002). Conflict and cooperation on South Asia's international rivers: A legal perspective. Washington, DC: World Bank Publications.
Samson, P., and Charrier, B. (1997). International freshwater conflict: Issues and prevention strategies. Geneva: Green Cross International.Google Scholar
Sanjinés, J. (1996). Informe de gestión. Proinsa, La Paz, Bolivia.Google Scholar
Savenije, H. H. G. (2001). Why water is not an ordinary economic good. IHE Delft Value of Water Research Report Series No. 9.Google Scholar
Savenije, H. H. G., and Zaag, P. (editors). (2000). Management of shared river basins; with special reference to the SADC and EU, Water Policy, 2(1/2), 9–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scanlon, J., Cassar, A., and Nemes, N. (2004). Water as a human right? IUCN Environmental Policy and Law Paper No. 51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schad, T. (1964). Legislative history of Federal River basin Planning Organization. In Organization of methodology of river basin planning, edited by Kinsvater, C. E.. Atlanta: Georgia Institute of Technology, Water Resources Center.Google Scholar
Schama, F. S. (1995). Landscape and memory. London: Harper Collins, p. 288.Google Scholar
Schmida, L. (1983). Keys to control: Israel's pursuit of Arab water resources. Washington, DC: American Educational Trust.Google Scholar
Secretariat of the Interim Committee for Coordination of Investigations of the Lower Mekong Basin. (1989). The Mekong Committee: A historical account (1957–89). Bangkok.
Segal, D. (2004). Singapore's Water Trade with Malaysia and Alternatives. Master's thesis, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.Google Scholar
Selznick, P. (1953). TVA and the grass roots. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Senegal River Basin Authority. (2006). Organisation de Mise en Valeur de la Vallee du Fleuve Senegal.Available at http://www.omvs-hc.org.
Serageldin, I. (1995). New York Times. The wars of the next century will be about water. August 10.Google Scholar
Sewell, W. R. Derrick (1966). Comprehensive river basin planning: The Lower Mekong experience. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Water Resources Center, June.Google Scholar
Shahin, M. (1986). Discussion of the paper “Ethiopian interests in the division of the Nile River waters.” Water International, 11(1, March), 16–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shamir, U. (1999). Water and peace: How can international water agreements be influenced by the public? Participatory Processes in Water Management (PPWM) – Proceedings of the Satellite Conference to the World Conference on Science: International Conference on Participatory Processes in Water Management, June 28–30, 1999. Budapest, Hungary, edited by Gayer, J. UNESCO-IHP/IA2P/IWRA. Paris: UNESCO- IHP-V.Google Scholar
Shamir, Y. (2003). Alternative dispute resolution approaches and their application. Paris: UNESCO IHP Technical Documents in Hydrology, PCCP Series No. 7.Google Scholar
Shela, O. N. (1999). The management of shared river basins: The Case of the Zambesi. River Basin Management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop, The Hague, October 27–29, 1999, edited by Mostert, E.. IHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31.Google Scholar
Sherk, G. W. (2003). East meets West: A tale of two water doctrines. Water Resources Impact, 5(2), 5–8.Google Scholar
Shevchenko, M., Rodionov, V., and Kindler, J. (2002). The Volga River Management Organization. In Integrated water management at river basin level: An institutional development perspective, edited by Alearts, G. and LeMoigne, G.. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
Shiklomanov, I. A. (1993). World fresh water resources. In Water in crisis. A guide to the world's fresh water resources, edited by Gleick, P. H.. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 13–24.Google Scholar
Shmueli, D. F., and Shamir, U. (2001). Application of international law of water quality to recent Middle East water agreements. Water Policy, 3, 405–423.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shubik, M. (1984). A game-theoretic approach to political economy: Volume 2 of game theory in the social sciences. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Shubik, M. (2002). Game theory and operations research: Some musings 50 years later. Operations Research, 50, 192–196.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shue, H. (1992). The unavoidability of justice. In The international politics of the environment: Actors, interests, and institutions, edited by Hurrell, A. and Kingsbury, B.. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 373–397.Google Scholar
Shuval, H. (1992). Approaches to resolving the water conflicts between Israel and her neighbors – A regional water-for-peace plan. Water International, 17(3, September), 133–143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simonovic, S. P. (1996). Decision support systems for sustainable management of water resources: General principles. Water International, 21(4, December), 223–232.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Singapore Ministry of Foreign Affairs. (2006). Chronology of developments related to water issue. Accessed at http://www.mfa.gov.sg/internet/press/water/event.htm, December 20. Edited 2007.
Sluimer, G., and Xie, M. (2002). The Mekong Delta. In Integrated water management at river basin level: An institutional development perspective, edited by Alearts, G. and LeMoigne, G.. Washington, DC: RFF for the World Bank.Google Scholar
Smith, C. (2006). 2006 review. Journal of the American Water Resources Association, issue edited by Sabatier et al., (February), 257–258.
Smith, N. (1975). Man and water: A history of hydro-technology. London: Charles Scribner and Sons.Google Scholar
Smith, T. J. (2003). Native American water rights. Water Resources Impact, 5(2), 16–18.Google Scholar
Song, J., and Whittington, D. (2004). Why have some countries on international rivers been successful negotiating treaties? A global perspective. Water Resources Research, 40(W05S06).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
SOPAC. (2006). Water Resources. Accessed at http://www.sopac.org.fj/tiki/tiki-index.php?page=CLP+Water+Resources+Assessment+and+Sanitation. December 21. Edited June 3, 2007.
Spector, B. I. (2000). Motivating water diplomacy: Finding the situational incentives to negotiate. International Negotiation, 5(2), 223–236.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sprout, H., and Sprout, M. (1957). Environmental factors in the study of international politics. Journal of Conflict Resolution, 1, 309–328.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stahl, K., and Wolf, A. T. (2003). Does hydro-climatic variability influence water-related political conflict and cooperation in international river basins? Proceedings CD of the International Conference on Hydrology of the Mediterranean and Semi-Arid Regions, Montpellier, France, April 1–4, 2003.Google Scholar
Starr, J. R. (1991). Water wars. Foreign Policy, 82(Spring), 17–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stauffer, T. (1982). The price of peace: The spoils of war. American-Arab Affairs, 1, 43–54.Google Scholar
Stein, J. G. (1988). International negotiation: A multidisciplinary perspective. Negotiation Journal, July, 221–231.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steiner, R. C., Hagen, E. R., and Ducnuigeen, J. (2000). Water supply demand and resources analysis in the Potomac River basin. Rockville, MD: Interstate Commission on the Potomac River Basin.Google Scholar
Stern, P. C., and Druckman, D. (2000). Evaluating interventions in history: The case of international conflict resolution. International Studies Review, 2(1), 33–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stevens, G. (1965). Jordan River partition. Stanford: Hoover Institution.Google Scholar
Stork, J. (1983). Water and Israel's occupation strategy. MERIP Reports, 116(13/6), 19–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stucki, P. (2005). Water wars or water peace? Rethinking the nexus between water scarcity and armed conflict. Geneva, Switzerland: Programme for Strategic and International Security Studies (PSIS) Occasional Paper No. 3/2005.Google Scholar
Sullivan, C. A., Meigh, J. R., Giacomello, A. M., Fediw, T., Lawrence, P., Samad, M., Mlote, S., Hutton, C., Allan, J. A., Schulze, R. E., Dlamini, D. J. M., Cosgrove, W., Priscoli, Delli J., Gleick, P., Smout, I., Cobbing, J., Calow, R., Hunt, C., Hussain, A., Acreman, M. C., King, J., Malomo, S., Tate, E. L., O'Regan, D., Milner, S., and Steyl, I. (2003). The water poverty index: Development and application at the community scale. Natural Resources Forum, 27(3, August), 189–199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sun Belt Water, Inc. (2006). Water – The Solution – Sun Belt Water, Inc. Acessed at http://www.sunbeltwater.com/. December 20.
Susskind, L., and Cruikshank, J. (1987). Breaking the impasse: Consensual approaches to resolving public disputes. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Swain, A. (2004). Managing water conflict: Asia, Africa and the Middle East. London and New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Swallow, B. M., Garrity, D. P., and Noordwijk, M. (2001). The effects of scales, flows, and filters on property rights and collective action in watershed management. Water Policy, 3, 457–474.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tanzi, A. (1997). Codifying the minimum standards of the law of international watercourses: Remarks on part one and a half. Natural Resources Forum, 21, 109–117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tanzeema, S., and Faisal, I. M. (2001). Sharing the Ganges: Acritical analysis of the water sharing treaties. Water Policy, 3(1), 13–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
TeBrake, W. H. (2002). Taming the waterwolf: Hydraulic engineering and water management in the Netherlands during the Middle Ages. Technology and Culture, 43(3, July), 475–499.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Technical Review Middle East. (2001). Syria and Iraq hold talks. July 31, 2001.
Teclaff, L. (1967). The river basin in history and law. Buffalo, NY: W. S.Hein and The Hague: Marinus Nijihoff.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Teclaff, L. A. (1996). Evolution of the river basin concept in national and international water law. Natural Resources Journal, 36(Spring), 359–352.Google Scholar
Teclaff, L. (2001). Fiat or custom: The checkered development of international water law. Natural Resources Journal, 31(1), 45–73.Google Scholar
This American Life. (2003). The Middle of Nowhere. WBEZ Chicago. Radio recording accessed at http://www.thislife.org/. December 5.
Thomas, K. (1976). Conflict and conflict management. In Handbook of industrial and organizational psychology, edited by Dunnett, M. C.. Chicago, IL: Rand-McNally.Google Scholar
Thomas, L. (1992). The fragile species. New York: Maxwell Macmillan International.Google Scholar
Tigran, Y. (2002). Transboundary water resources and political tensions in south Caucasus. Gland, Switzerland: Global Biodiversity Forum.Google Scholar
Tortajada, C., and Contreras-Moreno, N. (2005). Institutions for water management in Mexico. In Water institutions: Policies, performance, and prospects, edited by Gopalakrishnan, C., Tortajada, C., and Biswas, A. K.. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, pp. 99–127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toset, H. P. W., Gleditsch, N. P., and Hegre, H. (2001). Shared rivers and interstate conflict. Political Geography, 19(6), 971–996. Data available at http://www.prio.no/cwp/datasets.asp.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toynbee, A. (1946). A study of history. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Toynbee, A. (1958). Review: Oriental Despotism, by Karl Wittfogel, American Political Science Review, 52(March), 195–198.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trans-Caledon Tunnel Authority (TCTA). (2006a) LHWP funding. Accessed at http://www.tcta.co.za/article.jsp?article_id=43, December 12.
Trans-Caledon Tunnel Authority (TCTA). (2006b). LHWP history. Accessed at http://www.tcta.co.za/article.jsp?article_id=41, December 12.
Transboundary Freshwater Dispute Database (TFDD). (2006). Oregon State University. Available at http://www.transboundarywaters.orst.edu/.
Trolldalen, J. M. (1992). International river systems. In International environmental conflict resolution: The role of the United Nations, Oslo. Washington, DC: World Foundation for Environment and Development, pp. 61–91, 174–175.Google Scholar
Trolldalen, J. M., and Wennesland, T. (1998). (editors).Strengthening the Capacity of the United Nations in prevention and resolution of international environmental conflicts. Oslo, Norway: CESAR.Google Scholar
Trottier, J. (2000). Water and the challenge of Palestinian institution building. Journal of Palestine Studies, 29(2, Winter), 35–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trottier, J. (2003a). The need for a multiscalar analyses in the management of shared water resources. Paris: UNESCO IHP Technical Documents in Hydrology, PCCP Series No. 6.4.Google Scholar
Trottier, J. (2003b). Water wars: The rise of a hegemonic concept. Paris: UNESCO IHP Technical Documents in Hydrology, PCCP Series No. 6.8.Google Scholar
Tsur, Y., and Easter, W. (1994). The design of institutional arrangements for water allocation. In Water quantity/quality management and conflict resolution, edited by Dinar, A. and Loehman, E.. Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers.Google Scholar
Tuan, N. D., and Thanh, L. D. (1999). River basin management in Vietnam. River Basin Management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop, The Hague, October 27–29, 1999, edited by Mostert, E.. IHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31.Google Scholar
Turkish Daily News. (1999). Manavgat “Peace Water” ready for export. September 25.
Turkish Daily News. (2001). Turkey's water sale policy. August 3.
Turkish Daily News. (2005). Turkey launches water pipeline project to Turkish Cyprus. October. Accessed at http://www.tusiad.us/specific_page.cfm?CONTENT_ID=570.
Turkish Daily News. (2006). Privatization plays a role in scrapping of water project. April 8.
Turner, B. L. II, Kasperson, R. E., Matson, P. A., McCarthy, J. J., Corell, R. W., Christensen, L., Eckley, N., Kasperson, J. X., Luers, A., Martello, M. L., Polsky, C., Pulsipher, A., and Schiller, A. (2003). A framework for vulnerability analysis in sustainability science. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science (USA), 100(14), 8074–8079.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Turton, A. R. (1999). Water and state sovereignty: The hydropolitical challenge for states in arid regions. London: MEWREW Occasional Paper No. 5, Water Issues Study Group, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London.Google Scholar
Turton, A. R. (2001). Hydropolitics and security complex theory: An African perspective. 4th Pan-European International Relations Conference, University of Kent, Canterbury UK, September 8–10, 2001.Google Scholar
Turton, A. R. (2005). A critical assessment of the river basins at risk in the Southern African hydropolitical complex. Paper presented at the Workshop on the Management of International Rivers and Lakes, hosted by the Third World Centre for Water Management and the Helsinki University of Technology, Helsinki, Finland, August 17–19, 2005. (Forthcoming chapter in a book as yet untitled.) CSIR Report No. ENV-P-CONF 2005–001. Available online at http://www.awiru.co.za/pdf/7Critical%20Assessment%20of%20Basins%20at%20Risk%20in%20the%20Southern%20African%20Hydropolitical%20context.pdf
Turton, A. R., and Earle, A. (2005). Post-apartheid institutional development in selected southern African international river basins. In Water institutions: Policies, performance, and prospects, edited by Gopalakrishnan, C., Tortajada, C., and Biswas, A. K.. New York: Springer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turton, A. R., Ashton, P., and Cloete, T. E. (editors). (2003). Transboundary rivers, sovereignty and development: Hydropolitical drivers in the Okavango River basin. Pretoria and Geneva: AWIRU & Green Cross International.Google Scholar
Ubilava, M. (2004). Water management in south Caucasus. Presented at Integrated Water Management of Transboundary Catchments: A Contribution from Transcat, March 24–26, Venice, Italy. Available at http://www.feemweb.it/transcat_conf/conf_papers/Ubilava.pdf.Google Scholar
Uitto, J. I., and Duda, A. M. (2001). Management of transboundary water resources: Lessons from international cooperation for conflict prevention. Geographical Journal, 168(4), 365–378.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
United Nations. (1975). Management of international water resources: Institutional and legal aspects. Report of the panel of experts on the legal and institutional aspects of international water resources development, New York. Natural Resources/Water Series No. 1.
United Nations. (1978). Register of international rivers. Water Supply Management, 2(1), 1–58.
United Nations. (1994). ILC draft articles on the non-navigational uses of international watercourses, 1994. UN Doc. A/CN.4/L492 (1994). For history and commentary, see United Nations. Yearbook of the ILC from 1974–1991.
United Nations. (2002a). Report of the World Summit on Sustainable Development. Document A/CONF.199/20, Sales No. E.03.II.A.1. New York: United Nations.
United Nations. (2002b). United Nations Treaty Collection. Available at http://untreaty.un.org/English/treaty.asp.
United Nations. (2003). Draft environmental performance review of Georgia: First Review. Economic and Social Council, Special Session, February 18–19.
United Nations. (2005). Convention on the Law of the Non-navigational Uses of International Watercourses. Adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations on 21 May 1997. Not yet in force. See General Assembly Resolution 51/229, annex, Official Records of the General Assembly, Fifty-first Session, Supplement No. 49 (A/51/49). Available at http://untreaty.un.org/ilc/texts/instruments/english/conventions/8_3_1997.pdf
United Nations. (2007). United Nations Development Programme, Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Available at http://www.undp.org/mdg/.
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). (1987). Restoring the heart of Nicosia: Master plan to the Year 2000. November 1987.
United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UNECE). (1998). UNECE Convention on Access to Information, Public Participation in Decision-making and Access to Justice in Environmental Matters (Aarhus Convention), adopted June 25, 1998, at the Fourth Ministerial Conference in the “Environment for Europe” process, Aarhus, Denmark. Available at http://www.unece.org/env/pp/.
United Nations Committee on Economic Development (UNCED). (1993). Agenda 21: Earth Summit – The United Nations Programme of Action from Rio. New York: United Nations Publications.
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). (1991). Hydrology and water resources of small islands: A practical guide. A contribution to the International Hydrological Programme, IHP-111, Project 4.6.
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). (2003). Lake Titicaca Basin, Bolivia and Peru. The UN World Water Development Report: Water for People, Water for Life. Available at http://www.unesco.org/water/wwap/wwdr/table_contents.shtml. Updated January 19, 2007.
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization – UNESCO-PCCP. (2007). From potential conflict to co-operation potential project, UNESCO International Hydrological Programme (IHP) contribution to the World Water Assessment Programme (WWAP). See Web site, http://www.unesco.org/water/wwap/pccp/.
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). (1996). Rapid integrated river basin assessments. Proceedings UNEP Workshop, Tarleton State University, 20–22 February Tarleton State, Stephenville, TX.
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). (1998). Sourcebook of alternative technologies for freshwater augmentation in Latin America and the Caribbean. Division of Technology, Industry, and Economics. Technical Publication Series 8.
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and Oregon State University. (2002). Atlas of international freshwater agreements. Nairobi: UNEP Press.
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), and Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE). (2003). Environment and security: Transforming risks into cooperation, The case of Central Asia and South Eastern Europe. Switzerland (UNEP), Slovakia (UNDP), and Austria (OSCE). Available at http://www.iisd.org/pdf/2003/envsec_cooperation.pdf.
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Woodrow Wilson Center. (2004). Understanding environmental conflict and cooperation. Nairobi: UNEP-DEWA.
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). (1978). Systematic index of international water resources treaties, declarations, acts and cases, by basin: Volume I. Legislative Study No. 15.
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). (1984). Systematic index of international water resources treaties, declarations, acts and cases, by basin: Volume II. Legislative Study No. 34.
United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). (2003). Groundwater management – The search for practical approaches. A joint publication of the FAO Land and Water Development Division, the International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) with contributions from the Institute for Social and Environmental Transition Boulder, Colorado, the International Association of Hydrogeologists, Kenilworth, United Kingdom. Water Report 25. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.
United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (UN/ISDR). (2004). Living with risk: A global review of disaster reduction initiative Inter-Agency Secretariat of the International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (UN/ISDR). Geneva, Switzerland. http://www.unisdr.org/eng/about_isdr/bd-lwr-2004-eng-p.htm.
United Nations. State of the world population 2004: the Cairo consensus at Ten – population, reproductive health and the global effort to end poverty (1994). New York: United Nations Population Fund.
United Press International. (2003). Turkish prime minister to visit Syria. 3 January.
United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). (1991). Water in the sand: A survey of Middle East water issues. Draft. Corps Water Management Systems (CWMS). Washington, DC: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Institute for Water Resources (IWR).
United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). (2000). Columbia River Treaty briefing. Institute for Water Resources, Alexandria, VA, April 24, 2000.
United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). (2004). Flood control: Value to the nation. Brochure for the U.S. Congress, Alexandria, VA: Institute for Water Resources.
United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). (2006). Shared vision planning. Alexandria, VA: Institute for Water Resources.
United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE). (2007). Alexandria, VA: Institute for Water Resources. Accessed on December 21, 2007. Available at http://www.iwr.uasce.army.mil/.
United States National Water Commission. (1974). Summary of the National Water Commission. Arlington, VA: United States National Water Commission
United States Water Resources Council. (1967). Alternative institutional arrangements for managing river basin operations. Washington, DC: United States Water Resources Council.
Uphoff, N. (1992). Learning from Gal Oya. Possibilities for participatory development and post-Newtonian social science. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Ury, W. L. (1987). Strengthening international mediation. Negotiation Journal, July, 225–229.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ury, W. (1991). Getting past no: Negotiating your way from confrontations to cooperation. New York: Bantam Books.Google Scholar
Ury, W. L., Brett, J. M., and Goldberg, S. B. (1988). Getting disputes resolved: Designing systems to cut the costs of conflict. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
U.S. Water News Online. (2002). Israel and Turkey strike 20-year water deal. August.
U.S. Water News Online. (2006). Israel, Turkey put landmark water agreement into deep freeze. April.
Utton, A. (editor). (1992). Borders and water: North American issues. International Transboundary Center, Santa Fe, NM: University of New Mexico.Google Scholar
Utton, R. (1996). Which rule should prevail in international water disputes: That of reasonableness or that of no harm?Natural Resources Journal, 36, 635–641.Google Scholar
Vadas, R. G. (1999). The São Francisco. River Basin Management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop, The Hague, October 27–29, 1999, edited by Mostert, E.. IHP-V Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31.Google Scholar
Dam, P. J. E. M. (2002). Ecological challenges, technological innovations: The modernization of sluice building in Holland, 1300–1600, Technology and Culture, 43(3), 500–520.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zaag, P., Seyam, I. M., and Savenije, H. H. G. (2002). Towards measurable criteria for the equitable sharing of international water resources. Water Policy, 4, 19–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Valente, M. (2002). South America: MERCOSUR vows to take over huge water reserve, Mercosur Article, Inter Press Service (IPS)/Global Information Network, July 22, pp. 1–2.Google Scholar
Varady, R. G., and Iles-Shih, M. (2005). Global water initiatives: What do the experts think? Report on a survey of leading figures in the “World of Water.” In Impacts of mega-conferences on global water development and management, edited by Biswas, A. K.. New York: Springer Verlag.Google Scholar
Vaz, A. C. (1999). Incomati. River Basin Management: Proceedings of the UNESCO International Workshop, The Hague. October 27–29, 1999, edited by Mostert, E.. Technical Document in Hydrology No. 31, IHP-V.Google Scholar
Vaz, A. C. and Pereira, A. L. (1999). The Incomati and Limpopo, Savenije.Google Scholar
Vlachos, E. (1990). Water, peace and conflict management. Water International, 15, 185–188.Google Scholar
Vlachos, E. (1991). Water awareness and implementing action in local communities. In Water awareness in societal planning and decision-making, edited by Johansson, I.. Stockholm: Byggforskningsradet, pp. 229–242.Google Scholar
Vlachos, E. (1994). Transboundary water conflicts and alternative dispute resolution. Cairo: International Water Resources Association, VIIIth Congress.Google Scholar
Vlachos, E., Webb, A. C., and Murphy, I. (editors). (1986). The management of international river basin conflicts. Proceedings of a Workshop, Laxenburg, Austria, September 22–25, 1986. Washington, DC: George Washington University.Google Scholar
Vogel, C., and O'Brien, K. (2004). Vulnerability and global environmental change: Rhetoric and reality. AVISO Bulletin No. 13. Ottowa, ON: GECHS, pp. 1–8.Google Scholar
Walden, G. (2004). Conflicting water needs in the Klamath basin. Water Resources Impact, 6(1), 4–6.Google Scholar
Warshall, P. (1985). The morality of molecular water. Whole Earth Review, 85(Spring), 4–11.
Washington Institute for Near East Studies. (2003). Turkish water to Israel? PolicyWatch No. 782. August 14.
Water Exports NZ Limited. (2007). Accessed at http://www.waterexportsnz.com. January 13.
Water Bank. (2007). Accessed at http://www.waterbank.com/. January 13.
Waterbolk, H. T. (1962). The lower Rhine basin. In Courses toward urban life: Archeological considerations of some cultural alternates, edited by Braidwood, R. J. and Willey, G. R.. Chicago: Aldine Pub. Co.Google Scholar
Waterbury, J. (1979). Hydropolitics of the Nile Valley. New York: Syracuse University Press.Google Scholar
Waterbury, J. (1993). Transboundary water and the challenge of international cooperation in the Middle East. Presented at a symposium on water in the Arab World, Harvard University, October 1–3, 1993.Google Scholar
Waterbury, J. (2002). The Nile basin: National determinants of collective action. New Haven and London: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Wendall, and Schwan, (1975). Intergovernmental relations in water resources activities, for the National Water Commission of the United States. Arlington, VA: U.S. Department of Commerce PB 210358.Google Scholar
Wescoat, J. L. Jr. (1992). Beyond the river basin: The changing geography of international water problems and international watercourse law. Colorado Journal of International Environmental Law and Policy, 3, 301–330.Google Scholar
Wescoat, J. L. Jr. (1996). Main currents in early multilateral water treaties: A historical–geographic perspective, 1648–1948. Colorado Journal of International Environmental Law and Policy, 7(1), 39–74.Google Scholar
Westing, A. H. (1986). Global resources and international conflict: Environmental factors in strategic policy and action. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
White, G. (1963). The Mekong River plan. Scientific American, 208(4), 49–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, G. (1969). Strategies of American water management. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
White, G. F. (1974). Natural hazards: Local, national, global. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Whittington, D. (2004). Visions of Nile basin development. Water Policy, 6(1), 1–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitington, D., and McClelland, E. (1992). Opportunites for regional and international cooperation in the Nile Basin. Water International, 17(4), 144–154CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whittington, D., and Sadoff, C. (2005). Water resources management in the Nile basin: The economic value of cooperation. Water Policy, 7, 227–252.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilkenfeld, J., and Brecher, M. (1997). A Study of crisis. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Williamson, S. H. (2006). Exchange rate between the United States dollar and forty other countries, 1913–2005. EH.Net (supported by Economic History Association), Accessed at http://eh.net/hmit/exchangerates, December 4.
Wishart, D. (1989). An economic approach to understanding Jordan Valley water disputes. Middle East Review, 21(4), 45–53.Google Scholar
Wishart, D. (1990). The breakdown of the Johnston negotiations over the Jordan waters. Middle Eastern Studies, 26(4, October), 536–546.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wittfogel, K. A. (1956). The hydraulic civilizations. In Man's role in changing the face of the Earth, edited by Thomas, W. L.. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 152–164.Google Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (1993). Guidelines for a water-for-peace plan for the Jordan River watershed. Natural Resources Journal, 33(3, July), 797–839.Google Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (1994). A hydropolitical history of the Nile, Jordan, and Euphrates River basins. In International waters of the Middle East, edited by Biswas, A.. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (1995a). Rural nonpoint source pollution control in Wisconsin: The limits of a voluntary program?Water Resources Bulletin, 31(6, December), 1009–1022.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (1995b). Hydropolitics along the Jordan River: Scarce water and its impact on the Arab–Israeli conflict. Tokyo: United Nations University Press.Google Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (1995c). International water dispute resolution: The Middle East Multilateral Working Group on water resources. Water International, 20(3), 141–150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (1997). International water conflict resolution: Lessons from comparative analysis. International Journal of Water Resources Development, 13(3, September), 333–356.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (1998). Conflict and cooperation along international waterways. Water Policy, 1(2), 251–265.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (1999a). Criteria for equitable allocations: The heart of international water conflict. Natural Resources Forum, 23(1), 3–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (1999b). The transboundary freshwater dispute database project. Water International, 24(2, June), 160–163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (2000). Indigenous approaches to water conflict negotiations and implications for international waters. International Negotiation: A Journal of Theory and Practice, 5(December), 357–233.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (2001). Transboundary waters: Sharing benefits, lessons learned. Thematic Paper, Bonn Freshwater Conference, Bonn Germany November.Google Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (2002a). Conflict and cooperation: Survey of the past and reflections for the future. Geneva: Green Cross International.Google Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (editor). (2002b). Conflict prevention and resolution in water systems. Cheltenham, UK: Elgar.Google Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (editor). (2006). Hydropolitical vulnerability and resilience along international waters. (Five volumes: Africa, Latin America, North America, Asia, and Europe). Nairobi: UN Environment Programme.Google Scholar
Wolf, A. T. (editor). (2009, in press). Sharing water, sharing benefits: working towards effective transboundary water resources management: A graduate/professional skills-building workbook. Paris and Washington DC: UNESCO and The World Bank. Available at: http://www.unesco.org/water/wwap/pccp/.Google Scholar
Wolf, A. T., and Dinar, A. (1994). Middle East hydropolitics and equity measures for water-sharing agreements. Journal of Social, Political, and Economic Studies, 19(4, Spring), 69–94.Google Scholar
Wolf, A. T., Natharius, J. A., Danielson, J. J., Ward, B. S., and Pender, J. K. (1999). International river basins of the world. International Journal of Water Resource Development, 15(4), 387–427.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, A. T., Stahl, K., and Macomber, M. F. (2003a). Conflict and cooperation within international river basins: The importance of institutional capacity. Water Resources Update, 125, 31–40.Google Scholar
Wolf, A. T., Yoffe, S. B., and Giordano, M. (2003b). International waters: Identifying basins at risk. Water Policy, 5(1), 29–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolf, A. T., Kramer, A., Carius, A., and Dabelko, G. D. (2005). Managing water conflict and cooperation. In Worldwatch Institute, State of the world 2005: Redefining global security. Washington, DC: Worldwatch Institute.Google Scholar
World Bank. (1993). Water resources management. Washington, DC: World Bank.
World Bank. (1999). Initiating and sustaining water sector reforms: A synthesis. New Delhi, India: Allied Publisher.
World Bank. (2001). Senegal River Basin Water And Environmental Management Project. Project Brief, World Bank. Available at http://www.gefweb.org/Documents/Council_Documents/GEF_C18/Regional_Senegal_River_Basin.pdf. Updated 19 January 2007.
World Bank. (2002). China country water resources assistance strategy, 2002.
World Bank. (2004). Fueling cooperation: A regional approach to poverty reduction in the Senegal River basin. World Bank. Available at http://www.gefweb.org/Documents/Council_Documents/GEF_C18/Regional_Senegal_River_Basin.pdf. Updated January 19. 2007.
World Bank. (2006). Water and Growth, for WWF, Mexico City, March 22, 2006.
World Development Report. (1992). Development and the environment. Washington, DC: World Bank Group.
World Press Review. (1995). Next, wars over water? November 1995, pp. 8–13.
World Water Council. (2003). Financing for all. Marseilles: World Water Council.
World Water Assessment Program. (2003). 7 pilot case studies of water related stress in river basins, aquifers, cities and countries. World Water Development Report. March.
Worster, D. (1992). Rivers of empire: Water, aridity, and the growth of the American West. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Wouters, P. (1996). An assessment of recent developments in international watercourse law through the prism of the substantive rules governing use allocation. Natural Resources Journal, 36, 417–439.Google Scholar
Wouters, P. (2000). Codification and progressive development of international water law. Dordrecht: Kluwer.Google Scholar
Wouters, P. (2001). The legal response to international water scarcity and water conflicts. The UN watercourses convention and beyond. Water Policy International, UK. German Yearbook of International Law, 2000, pp. 292–336.Google Scholar
Wouters, P. (2003). Personal communication.
Wouters, P. (2003). Sharing transboundary waters: User's guide and legal report. Dundee, Scotland: University of Dundee, Knowledge and Research Project No. R8039.Google Scholar
WRM. (2000). Bulletin, April (33), Available at http://www.wrm.org.uy/bulletin/33/index.rtf.
Xia, J, Huang, G. H, Chen, Z., and Rong, X. (2001) An integrated planning framework for managing flood endangered regions in the Yangtze River Basin, Water International, 26(2), 153–161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yardley, J. (2004). Dam building threatens China's Grand Canyon, New York Times, March 10.Google Scholar
Yian, N. G. (2001). A deal for the future. Today, September 5.Google Scholar
Yoffe, S. B. (2001). Basins at risk: Conflict and cooperation over international freshwater resources. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR. Available at http://www.transboundarywaters.orst.edu.
Yoffe, S. B., Wolf, A. T., and Giordano, M. (2003). Conflict and cooperation over international freshwater resources: Indicators of basins at risk. Journal of the American Water Resources Association, (October), 1109–1126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yoffe, S., Fiske, G., Giordano, M., Giordano, M., Larson, K., Stahl, K., and Wolf, A. T. (2004). Geography of international water conflict and cooperation: Data sets and applications. Water Resources Research, 40(W05S04), doi:10.1029/2003WR002530.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, O. R. (1989). International cooperation: Building institutions for natural resources and the environment. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Young, O. (1992). International cooperation: Building regimes for natural resources and the Environment. Ithaca, New York, Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Young, G. J., Dooge, J. C., and Rodda, J. C. (1994). Global Water Resource Issues. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Zaman, M. (1982). The Ganges basin and the water dispute. Water Supply and Management, 6(4), 321–328.Google Scholar
Zartman, I. W. (1991). The structure of negotiation. In International Negotiation, edited by Kremenyuk, V., pp. 65–77.Google Scholar
Zartman, I. W. (1992). International environmental negotiation: Challenges for analysis and practice. Negotiation Journal, 8(2), pp. 113–124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zartman, I. W. (1993). A skeptic's view. In Culture and negotiation: The resolution of water disputes, edited by Faure, G. O. and Rubin, J. Z.. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, pp. 17–21.Google Scholar
Zawahri, N. A. (2006). Institutional design and cooperation between adversaries: Accounting for the effectiveness of international river commissions. Cleveland, OH: Cleveland State University.Google Scholar
Zilleßen, H. (1991). Alternative dispute resolution – Ein neuer Verfahrensansatz zu Optimierung politischer Entscheidungen. Lokale Konfliktregelung durch kooperative Verhandlung und Vermittlung (Mediation), in T. Bühler (Stiftung Mitarbeit) (Hrsg.): Demokratie vor Ort. Modelle und Wege der lokalen Bürgerbeteiligung, Beiträge zur Demokratieentwicklung von unten, Bd. 2, S, pp. 126–146.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×