|
Switzerland-Gi-Gi Κατάλογοι Εταιρεία
|
Εταιρικά Νέα :
- `Trans-Boundary water conflict a case study of South Indian River - DiVA
`Trans-Boundary water conflict – a case study of South Indian River Rajkumar Prajwal DEPARTMENT OF EARTH SCIENCES INSTITUTIONEN FÖR The issue further extended to cause major environmental and social harms due to water scarcity Keywords: Sustainable Develop ment, Water Conflict , Cauvery River, living in the society but is anticipated to have much wider impact on the economic growth and development Statistically, it is argued that the issue of water scarcity has the tendency to
- Case Studies - Water Conflict Resolution | Program in Water Conflict . . .
Appendix C in, Delli Priscoli, Jerry and Aaron T Wolf Managing and Transforming Water Conflicts Cambridge: Cambridge University Press The purpose of the case studies are to review the literature on water disputes and related water treaties to gain an understanding of why previous and current disputes over water have occurred and to seek out lessons to be learned in preventing similar future disputes
- SHIFTING LANDS, FLOWING WATERS: Transboundary Cooperation For Water And . . .
7 Diamber Basha Dam - Rising Conflict and Cause of a Potential Disaster by KatyayiniSood and Srijan Pant 8 Importance of India’s Resolving Transboundary Issues with China by Muhammad Salih pk iyyad 9 An Analytical Study of Trans-boundary Cooperation for River Water in the Context of India and
- Sardar Sarovar Dam Conflict in India | Climate-Diplomacy
The Sardar Sarovar Dam, constructed on the sacred Narmada River, aims to secure power, as well as irrigation and drinking water, for the drought-prone region However, the project has also had significant environmental impacts and has displaced large proportions of the population, especially poor farmers and ethnic and Adivasis, the aboriginal population of India Indeed, this situation catalysed one of the major environmental protest movements in India
- Editor’s Pick: 10 Violent Water Conflicts - World | ReliefWeb
In our Editor’s Pick, we present 10 case studies from our interactive ECC Factbook that analyse the linkages between water and conflict They look at various pathways through which water and
- Transboundary Water Conflict: A case study of the Mekong River Basin
29) “Water leads to war” thesis Now that the Mekong Basin is facing a dramatic change—a change that affects both politically, economically, culturally, and ecologically, without proper environmental policy and cooperation, many observers claimed that these changes may lead to greater transnational conflict due to geographical interdependence of water boundaries combined with population pressures, rising consumption, increased water scarcity, pollution and poor water management, in
- Persisting Transboundary Resource Conflicts in Africa- a Case Study of . . .
frontiers of two or more countries Any substantial adverse environmental effects caused by a 1 Nunzio, J D (2013) Conflict on the Nile: The future of transboundary water disputes over the world’s longest river Strategic Analysis Paper 2 FAO,( 2005) Natural Resource Conflicts, Collaborative Management and Sustainable Livelihoods
- InternatIonal rIver BasIns: ManageMent and ConflICt PersPeCtIves - ETH Z
scholarly and public discourse on ‘environmental conflicts’ and ‘water wars’ has gained prominence only in the last two decades Under conditions of growing demand, water as an essential resource and impacts of conflicts in river basins are distinguished from studies dealing specifically with the emphasis on the economic nature of water produced initiatives to strengthen the role of the private sector and stressed the importance of cost recovery In the 2000s, the political
- The 1964 Jordan River Diversion Plan: Transboundary Water Basins and . . .
Water scarcity and its management have emerged as critical factors shaping the global security landscape, especially in transboundary river basins Population growth is outstripping water supply, and climate change is affecting it as well Since 1990, freshwater resources have declined by 58%, globally, and the situation is more acute in some regions Thus, the potential for violent conflict triggered by water is a realistic scenario Nevertheless, the literature implies that water conflicts
|
|