Managing transboundary waters in extreme environments: the role of international actors in Africa

Africa is a continent of extreme water resource environments with arguably the greatest spatial and temporal natural water supply variability in the world. Africa is also a land of transboundary waters. With the exception of island states, every African country has territory in at least one transbou...

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Autores principales: Giordano, Mark, Lautze, Jonathan F.
Formato: Capítulo de libro
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/37317
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author Giordano, Mark
Lautze, Jonathan F.
author_browse Giordano, Mark
Lautze, Jonathan F.
author_facet Giordano, Mark
Lautze, Jonathan F.
author_sort Giordano, Mark
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Africa is a continent of extreme water resource environments with arguably the greatest spatial and temporal natural water supply variability in the world. Africa is also a land of transboundary waters. With the exception of island states, every African country has territory in at least one transboundary river basin. These basins cover 62% of Africa's total land area, and virtually every one greater than 50,000 km2 crosses at least one national boundary. The management of these transboundary waters in conditions of such variability has been made even more complex by the unique political and economic history of the continent, in particular as related to the involvement of outside actors. In the first half of the 20th century this involvement was related to colonialism. From the second half to the present, it has involved bi-lateral and international donors, lenders and international NGOs. In this paper, we examine the impacts of this influence by first reviewing the development of transboundary water law in Africa. We then examine how the global norms now mentioned in African law, in particular equity in water allocation, have actually influenced agreement content. Finally, we examine the extent to which influences wielded by international actors are a logical response to conditions in Africa's international basins. The results highlight the tangible influences of international actors on the orientation and content of basin level agreements and suggest the use of greater discretion in the application of international paradigms to water management agreements in extreme environments.
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spelling CGSpace373172023-06-08T19:54:49Z Managing transboundary waters in extreme environments: the role of international actors in Africa Giordano, Mark Lautze, Jonathan F. water law equity water governance international waters international agreements history river basin management water resource management water allocation Africa is a continent of extreme water resource environments with arguably the greatest spatial and temporal natural water supply variability in the world. Africa is also a land of transboundary waters. With the exception of island states, every African country has territory in at least one transboundary river basin. These basins cover 62% of Africa's total land area, and virtually every one greater than 50,000 km2 crosses at least one national boundary. The management of these transboundary waters in conditions of such variability has been made even more complex by the unique political and economic history of the continent, in particular as related to the involvement of outside actors. In the first half of the 20th century this involvement was related to colonialism. From the second half to the present, it has involved bi-lateral and international donors, lenders and international NGOs. In this paper, we examine the impacts of this influence by first reviewing the development of transboundary water law in Africa. We then examine how the global norms now mentioned in African law, in particular equity in water allocation, have actually influenced agreement content. Finally, we examine the extent to which influences wielded by international actors are a logical response to conditions in Africa's international basins. The results highlight the tangible influences of international actors on the orientation and content of basin level agreements and suggest the use of greater discretion in the application of international paradigms to water management agreements in extreme environments. 2009 2014-06-12T14:37:55Z 2014-06-12T14:37:55Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/37317 en Limited Access Giordano, Mark; Lautze, Jonathan. 2009. Managing transboundary waters in extreme environments: the role of international actors in Africa. In Lipchin, C.; Sandler, D.; Cushman, E. (Eds.). The Jordan River and Dead Sea Basin: cooperation amid conflict. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Springer. pp.113-138. (NATO Science for Peace and Security Series - C: Environmental Security)
spellingShingle water law
equity
water governance
international waters
international agreements
history
river basin management
water resource management
water allocation
Giordano, Mark
Lautze, Jonathan F.
Managing transboundary waters in extreme environments: the role of international actors in Africa
title Managing transboundary waters in extreme environments: the role of international actors in Africa
title_full Managing transboundary waters in extreme environments: the role of international actors in Africa
title_fullStr Managing transboundary waters in extreme environments: the role of international actors in Africa
title_full_unstemmed Managing transboundary waters in extreme environments: the role of international actors in Africa
title_short Managing transboundary waters in extreme environments: the role of international actors in Africa
title_sort managing transboundary waters in extreme environments the role of international actors in africa
topic water law
equity
water governance
international waters
international agreements
history
river basin management
water resource management
water allocation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/37317
work_keys_str_mv AT giordanomark managingtransboundarywatersinextremeenvironmentstheroleofinternationalactorsinafrica
AT lautzejonathanf managingtransboundarywatersinextremeenvironmentstheroleofinternationalactorsinafrica