This article examines the right to water from an environmental perspective. In particular it focuses on the various forms of legal recognition provided to the right and how these interact with the realities of water stress and shortage. It places particular emphasis on the international construction of the right and its domestic application. The article also examines how existing legal mechanisms, such as the ecosystem approach and concept of sustainability, may assist in balancing these supply and demand considerations. Finally, it looks to ways the right to water may be realized within the constraints of environmental capacity
This thesis critically examines the mainstream discourse on the human right to water and suggests th...
Defence date: 15 December 2010Examining Board: Philip Alston (New York University School of Law); Ca...
In recent years, significant debate has taken place around the concept of the “human right to water”...
This article inquires into the meaning of a 'right' to water. It examines how the nature and content...
The debate on water emerged strongly at the international level, due to the worrisome phenomenon of ...
The debate on water emerged strongly at the international level, due to the worrisome phenomenon of ...
The debate on water emerged strongly at the international level, due to the worrisome phenomenon of ...
The debate on water emerged strongly at the international level, due to the worrisome phenomenon of ...
Water is today subject of debate in the international arena due to the deep politic, economic and so...
Water is becoming increasingly scarce. Unequal geographic distribution of freshwater resources puts ...
Defence date: 15 December 2010Examining Board: Philip ALSTON (New York University School of Law), ...
NoThis paper examines the scope for a rights-based perspective on the Millennium Development Goals (...
The scholarship on the right to water has proliferated in interesting and unexpected ways. Through h...
Human rights and environmental protection are two often overlapping bodies of law, each of which by ...
Defence date: 15 December 2010Examining Board: Philip Alston (New York University School of Law); Ca...
This thesis critically examines the mainstream discourse on the human right to water and suggests th...
Defence date: 15 December 2010Examining Board: Philip Alston (New York University School of Law); Ca...
In recent years, significant debate has taken place around the concept of the “human right to water”...
This article inquires into the meaning of a 'right' to water. It examines how the nature and content...
The debate on water emerged strongly at the international level, due to the worrisome phenomenon of ...
The debate on water emerged strongly at the international level, due to the worrisome phenomenon of ...
The debate on water emerged strongly at the international level, due to the worrisome phenomenon of ...
The debate on water emerged strongly at the international level, due to the worrisome phenomenon of ...
Water is today subject of debate in the international arena due to the deep politic, economic and so...
Water is becoming increasingly scarce. Unequal geographic distribution of freshwater resources puts ...
Defence date: 15 December 2010Examining Board: Philip ALSTON (New York University School of Law), ...
NoThis paper examines the scope for a rights-based perspective on the Millennium Development Goals (...
The scholarship on the right to water has proliferated in interesting and unexpected ways. Through h...
Human rights and environmental protection are two often overlapping bodies of law, each of which by ...
Defence date: 15 December 2010Examining Board: Philip Alston (New York University School of Law); Ca...
This thesis critically examines the mainstream discourse on the human right to water and suggests th...
Defence date: 15 December 2010Examining Board: Philip Alston (New York University School of Law); Ca...
In recent years, significant debate has taken place around the concept of the “human right to water”...