Extensive literature has shown the impact of water scarcity discourses on national policies, however the impact of water scarcity discourses on transboundary water governance has been overlooked. This article contributes to filling this gap by investigating the impact of the water scarcity discourse in the case of Jordan, specifically on three cases of transboundary water governance: the Yarmouk River, the Jordan River and the Disi Aquifer. This article shows that the water scarcity discourse is not enough to explain transboundary water governance, as it needs to be contextualized in the broader context, considering national security, regional geopolitics, inter-sectorial interests, and power asymmetries. This is particularly true when cons...
The watershed of the Jordan River stretches over four countries – Jordan, Syria, Israel, and Lebanon...
This paper explores the evolving patterns of hydropolitical relations in the dynamic contexts of Yar...
The turmoil in the Middle East takes its roots in the sharp incongruence between collective identiti...
Extensive literature has shown the impact of water scarcity discourses on national policies, however...
This thesis investigates the construction of the discourse of water scarcity in Jordan. First, it id...
This article investigates Jordanian and Syrian hydropolitical discourses around the bilateral relati...
This article investigates the construction of the discourse of water scarcity in Jordan. It identifi...
This article explores the ways in which key components of infrastructure built on the Yarmouk tribut...
This viewpoint analyzes the Jordanian water strategy to investigate how water scarcity is framed, an...
This article explores the ways in which two international water agreements on the Yarmouk tributary ...
This article is a comparative analysis of the effects of power structures on the success and/or fail...
Jordan is often held up as one of the most water scarce countries in the world. The water scarcity i...
Transboundary surface water is of strategic importance in the Arab world as it accounts for over two...
This article investigates the construction of the discourse of water scarcity in Jordan. It identifi...
In many regions of the world, the multiple uses of transboundary fresh water have been a critically ...
The watershed of the Jordan River stretches over four countries – Jordan, Syria, Israel, and Lebanon...
This paper explores the evolving patterns of hydropolitical relations in the dynamic contexts of Yar...
The turmoil in the Middle East takes its roots in the sharp incongruence between collective identiti...
Extensive literature has shown the impact of water scarcity discourses on national policies, however...
This thesis investigates the construction of the discourse of water scarcity in Jordan. First, it id...
This article investigates Jordanian and Syrian hydropolitical discourses around the bilateral relati...
This article investigates the construction of the discourse of water scarcity in Jordan. It identifi...
This article explores the ways in which key components of infrastructure built on the Yarmouk tribut...
This viewpoint analyzes the Jordanian water strategy to investigate how water scarcity is framed, an...
This article explores the ways in which two international water agreements on the Yarmouk tributary ...
This article is a comparative analysis of the effects of power structures on the success and/or fail...
Jordan is often held up as one of the most water scarce countries in the world. The water scarcity i...
Transboundary surface water is of strategic importance in the Arab world as it accounts for over two...
This article investigates the construction of the discourse of water scarcity in Jordan. It identifi...
In many regions of the world, the multiple uses of transboundary fresh water have been a critically ...
The watershed of the Jordan River stretches over four countries – Jordan, Syria, Israel, and Lebanon...
This paper explores the evolving patterns of hydropolitical relations in the dynamic contexts of Yar...
The turmoil in the Middle East takes its roots in the sharp incongruence between collective identiti...