Based on research conducted from May-August, 2017 in the Pamir Mountains of Tajikistan, I argue that local communities are redefining the Panj River border with Afghanistan. Drawing from critical border studies in political geography, this paper argues that border-making processes and practices along the Panj River border can be understood as socioecological through three particular “waterscapes”: (1) divison; (2) devotion; and (3) development. Whereas in the past, the Panj River border stood as a division “between two worlds,” data collected through interviews and participant observation indicates that this legacy of division is being contested by water users i...
Mountain communities are today bearing the brunt of the adverse socio-economic and environmental imp...
A new article by Mohsen Nagheeby (IHE alumnus and PhD candidate at Northumbria University) and Jeroe...
This research highlights the outcomes of the environmental diplomacy workshop held between members o...
Fluvial dynamics in riverine borders can play an important role in political relationships between c...
The Kunduz River Valley of northern Afghanistan and the Vakhsh River Valley of southern Tajikistan f...
Fluvial dynamics in riverine borders can play an important role in political relationships between c...
AbstractThe Kunduz River Valley of northern Afghanistan and the Vakhsh River Valley of southern Taji...
There is currently no water cooperation between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Of the nine rivers that fl...
Nowadays many scientists and specialists say that in the twenty-first century, not hydrocarbons but ...
This paper explores the geopolitical overlay that is shaping dynamic hydropolitical interactions of ...
Reports predict frighteningly serious escalations of the controversy between Afghanistan and its nei...
The four decades long ideological-based insurgencies and conflict in the Kabul River Basin (KRB) hav...
Transboundary water conflict and cooperation are often conceptualised through the premises of nation...
Two major events transformed the political geography of the Aral Sea Basin (ASB) region a decade apa...
International rivers are conventionally understood as watercourses that cross national boundaries, w...
Mountain communities are today bearing the brunt of the adverse socio-economic and environmental imp...
A new article by Mohsen Nagheeby (IHE alumnus and PhD candidate at Northumbria University) and Jeroe...
This research highlights the outcomes of the environmental diplomacy workshop held between members o...
Fluvial dynamics in riverine borders can play an important role in political relationships between c...
The Kunduz River Valley of northern Afghanistan and the Vakhsh River Valley of southern Tajikistan f...
Fluvial dynamics in riverine borders can play an important role in political relationships between c...
AbstractThe Kunduz River Valley of northern Afghanistan and the Vakhsh River Valley of southern Taji...
There is currently no water cooperation between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Of the nine rivers that fl...
Nowadays many scientists and specialists say that in the twenty-first century, not hydrocarbons but ...
This paper explores the geopolitical overlay that is shaping dynamic hydropolitical interactions of ...
Reports predict frighteningly serious escalations of the controversy between Afghanistan and its nei...
The four decades long ideological-based insurgencies and conflict in the Kabul River Basin (KRB) hav...
Transboundary water conflict and cooperation are often conceptualised through the premises of nation...
Two major events transformed the political geography of the Aral Sea Basin (ASB) region a decade apa...
International rivers are conventionally understood as watercourses that cross national boundaries, w...
Mountain communities are today bearing the brunt of the adverse socio-economic and environmental imp...
A new article by Mohsen Nagheeby (IHE alumnus and PhD candidate at Northumbria University) and Jeroe...
This research highlights the outcomes of the environmental diplomacy workshop held between members o...