Managing and Transforming Water Conflicts
By Jerome Delli Priscoli and Aaron T. Wolf
Cambridge University Press/International Hydrology Series
Where water crosses boundaries – be they economic, legal, political or cultural – the
stage is set for disputes between different users trying to safeguard access to a vital
resource, while protecting the natural environment. Without strategies to anticipate,
address, and mediate between competing users, intractable water conflicts are likely to
become more frequent, more intense, and more disruptive around the world. In this
book, Delli Priscoli and Wolf investigate the dynamics of water conflict and conflict
resolution, from the local to the international. They explore the inexorable links between
three facets of conflict management and transformation: Alternative Dispute Resolution
(ADR), public participation, and institutional capacity. This practical guide will be
invaluable to water management professionals, as well as to researchers and students in
engineering, economics, geography, geology, and political science who are involved in
any aspects of water management.
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Water and Peace for the People - Possible solutions to water disputes in the Middle East
By Jon Martin Trondalen
UNESCO/IHP Water and Conflict Resolution Series
This book proposes practical and objective solutions to the entrenched water conflicts in
the Middle East. The author reveals and clarifies the complexity of water conflicts,
drawing on years of experience facilitating and chairing water negotiations in the region.
Analyzing what is at stake in each situation while releasing new information, the author
examines the conflicts in the Upper Jordan River between Israel and Syria around the
Golan Heights, between Israel and Lebanon over the Wazzani Spring, and the
longstanding water dispute between Palestinians and Israelis. Challenges confronting
Turkey, Syria and Iraq in sharing water of the Euphrates and Tigris Rivers are also
assessed.
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Data Requirements for Integrated Urban Water Management
Edited by Tim D. Fletcher and Ana Deletić
UNESCO-IHP Urban Water Series - UNESCO Publishing / Taylor & Francis
Integrated urban water management relies on data allowing us to analyze, understand and predict the behavior of the individual water cycle components and their interactions. The concomitant monitoring of the complex of urban water system elements makes it possible to grasp the entirety of relations among the various components of the urban water cycle and so develop a holistic approach to solving urban water problems.
Data Requirements for Integrated Urban Water Management – issuing from UNESCO’s International Hydrological Programme project on this topic – is geared towards improving integrated urban water management by providing guidance on the collection, validation, storage, assessment and utilization of the relevant data. The first part of this volume describes general principles for developing a monitoring programme in support of sustainable urban water management. The second part examines in detail the monitoring of individual water cycle components. Two case studies in the final part illustrating attempts to deliver an integrated monitoring system help demonstrate the fundamental principles of sustainable urban water management elaborated here.
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Aquatic Habitats in Sustainable Urban Water Management (Science, Policy and Practice)
Edited by Iwona Wagner, Jiri Marsalek and Pascal Breil
UNESCO-IHP Urban Water Series – UNESCO Publishing / Taylor & Francis
Aquatic habitats supply a wide range of vital ecosystem benefits to cities and their inhabitants. The unsustainable use of aquatic habitats, including inadequate urban water management, however, tends to alter and reduce their biodiversity and thereby diminish their ability to provide clean water, protect us from waterborne diseases and pollutants, keep urban areas safe from flooding, and support recreational ecosystem services and even the aesthetic enjoyment of our world.
Aquatic Habitats in Sustainable Urban Water Management – the result of collaboration between UNESCO’s International Hydrological Programme and its Man and the Biosphere Programme – aims at improving our understanding of aquatic habitats, related ecosystem goods and services, and conservation and sustainable use – with a special focus on their integration into urban water management. The first part of this volume reviews basic concepts and challenges in urban aquatic habitats, as well as strategies for their management integration. The second part examines technical measures related to habitats management and rehabilitation, along with their incorporation into urban planning and their role in human health. The final part looks at current urban aquatic habitat issues and practical approaches to solving them through the lens of case studies from around the globe.
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