AbstractThe debate on water management is presently dominated by concepts of Water Governance, Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) and River Basin Management. These concepts make apparent, that management approaches are based on a basin or a catchment area. This geographical unit is presented as the most relevant one for the delimitation of what and who should be integrated in the management institutions or governance structure. This paper questions the river basin as a “naturally” given geographical unit for water management and positions this attempt to naturalize the delimitation of water governance regions in a global trend of depolitizing water management.This contribution is based on a set of reflections presented at the REGo...
The central focus of this volume is a critical comparative analysis of the key drivers for water res...
The central focus of this volume is a critical comparative analysis of the key drivers for water res...
This paper briefly discusses early geographicalperspectives on water resourcesmanagement and notes t...
AbstractThe debate on water management is presently dominated by concepts of Water Governance, Integ...
When water problems extend beyond the borders of local communities, the river basin is generally see...
When water problems extend beyond the borders of local communities, the river basin is generally see...
Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) is a relatively recent practice being adopted by water ...
Current mainstream visions of water management tend to promote a view of river basin development as ...
The concept of a river basin as a management or planning unit has gone through several stages and is...
This article engages with the currently hegemonic status of a triad of water policy prescriptions: m...
The idea that ecosystem management should be approached at the bioregional scale is central to the t...
Water management is commonly assumed to be a mere technical matter where experts and managers endeav...
Water management is commonly assumed to be a mere technical matter where experts and managers endeav...
Integrated River Basin Governance - Learning from International Experience is designed to help pract...
Paper presented at the International Workshop on Water: Spatial Dynamics, Competitive Claims and Gov...
The central focus of this volume is a critical comparative analysis of the key drivers for water res...
The central focus of this volume is a critical comparative analysis of the key drivers for water res...
This paper briefly discusses early geographicalperspectives on water resourcesmanagement and notes t...
AbstractThe debate on water management is presently dominated by concepts of Water Governance, Integ...
When water problems extend beyond the borders of local communities, the river basin is generally see...
When water problems extend beyond the borders of local communities, the river basin is generally see...
Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) is a relatively recent practice being adopted by water ...
Current mainstream visions of water management tend to promote a view of river basin development as ...
The concept of a river basin as a management or planning unit has gone through several stages and is...
This article engages with the currently hegemonic status of a triad of water policy prescriptions: m...
The idea that ecosystem management should be approached at the bioregional scale is central to the t...
Water management is commonly assumed to be a mere technical matter where experts and managers endeav...
Water management is commonly assumed to be a mere technical matter where experts and managers endeav...
Integrated River Basin Governance - Learning from International Experience is designed to help pract...
Paper presented at the International Workshop on Water: Spatial Dynamics, Competitive Claims and Gov...
The central focus of this volume is a critical comparative analysis of the key drivers for water res...
The central focus of this volume is a critical comparative analysis of the key drivers for water res...
This paper briefly discusses early geographicalperspectives on water resourcesmanagement and notes t...