This article explores the ways in which key components of infrastructure built on the Yarmouk tributary to the Jordan River induce or impede the transformation of existing transboundary water arrangements. Focussing on the Jordanian-Israeli Adassiyeh Weir and on the Jordanian-Syrian Wehdeh Dam, the article interprets archival documents, official river-gauging data, and interviews through a frame that highlights depoliticisation by hydrocracies within the politics of international infrastructure. The weir is found to be operated in a manner that prioritises Jordan's commitment to Israel when flows are low, and to be designed to bound the volume that Jordan can make use of during low or very high flows. The dam appears oversized but regulates...
The watershed of the Jordan River stretches over four countries – Jordan, Syria, Israel, and Lebanon...
This thesis investigates the construction of the discourse of water scarcity in Jordan. First, it id...
Jordan is often held up as one of the most water scarce countries in the world. The water scarcity i...
This article explores the ways in which two international water agreements on the Yarmouk tributary ...
This article investigates Jordanian and Syrian hydropolitical discourses around the bilateral relati...
Extensive literature has shown the impact of water scarcity discourses on national policies, however...
This article reviews three bilateral agreements made between Jordan and Syria over the last 50 years...
This article is a comparative analysis of the effects of power structures on the success and/or fail...
This paper explores the evolving patterns of hydropolitical relations in the dynamic contexts of Yar...
The Yarmouk River basin is shared between Syria, Jordan, and Israel. Since the 1960s, Yarmouk River ...
In this article, Turkey, Iran and Syria in the Middle East area are taken as examples for deficient ...
** From Crossref via Jisc Publications Router.This Viewpoint article argues that Sustainable Develop...
This article advances a critique of the UN Economic and Social Commission for West Asia’s (ESCWA’s) ...
Transboundary surface water is of strategic importance in the Arab world as it accounts for over two...
Proposed resolutions to the Arab-Israeli water conflictthat fail to consider the introduction of alt...
The watershed of the Jordan River stretches over four countries – Jordan, Syria, Israel, and Lebanon...
This thesis investigates the construction of the discourse of water scarcity in Jordan. First, it id...
Jordan is often held up as one of the most water scarce countries in the world. The water scarcity i...
This article explores the ways in which two international water agreements on the Yarmouk tributary ...
This article investigates Jordanian and Syrian hydropolitical discourses around the bilateral relati...
Extensive literature has shown the impact of water scarcity discourses on national policies, however...
This article reviews three bilateral agreements made between Jordan and Syria over the last 50 years...
This article is a comparative analysis of the effects of power structures on the success and/or fail...
This paper explores the evolving patterns of hydropolitical relations in the dynamic contexts of Yar...
The Yarmouk River basin is shared between Syria, Jordan, and Israel. Since the 1960s, Yarmouk River ...
In this article, Turkey, Iran and Syria in the Middle East area are taken as examples for deficient ...
** From Crossref via Jisc Publications Router.This Viewpoint article argues that Sustainable Develop...
This article advances a critique of the UN Economic and Social Commission for West Asia’s (ESCWA’s) ...
Transboundary surface water is of strategic importance in the Arab world as it accounts for over two...
Proposed resolutions to the Arab-Israeli water conflictthat fail to consider the introduction of alt...
The watershed of the Jordan River stretches over four countries – Jordan, Syria, Israel, and Lebanon...
This thesis investigates the construction of the discourse of water scarcity in Jordan. First, it id...
Jordan is often held up as one of the most water scarce countries in the world. The water scarcity i...