This paper analyses how control over transboundary water is being achieved in the Harirud/Tejen River Basin, located in Afghanistan, Iran and Turkmenistan. It illustrates how a weaker country like Afghanistan compensates its structural power deficit by relying on international support and taking advantage of its neighbours’ foreign policy constraints. It also illustrates the importance of national power struggles to explain Afghanistan’s unilateral resource capture strategy and related tactics at the international level. Despite achieving greater control, Afghanistan does not fit the definition of hydro-hegemon and its resource capture strategy may only have served as an entry point towards future dialogue
The final thesis Factor o f Water in Central Asia presents an analysis of the phenomena of trans-bou...
Transboundary river basins are by their nature surrounded by political discourses and negotiations a...
The article describes local realities and contextual circumstances in Afghanistan which are infuenci...
This paper analyses how control over transboundary water is being achieved in the Harirud/Tejen Rive...
This paper explores the geopolitical overlay that is shaping dynamic hydropolitical interactions of ...
A new article by Mohsen Nagheeby (IHE alumnus and PhD candidate at Northumbria University) and Jeroe...
Reports predict frighteningly serious escalations of the controversy between Afghanistan and its nei...
Afghanistan has five major river basins which four of them are transboundary and shared with Iran, P...
Border Rivers, as one of the most important natural terrain, are always the source of many differenc...
The water allocations in the Amu Darya Basin reflect the colonial legacy of the Soviet Union: the do...
The increasing structural and physical scarcity of water across the globe calls for a deeper underst...
The article seeks to expand the understanding of the emerging concept of hydrohegemony (Zeitoun and ...
The increasing structural and physical scarcity of water across the globe calls for a deeper underst...
The article seeks to expand the understanding of the emerging concept of hydrohegemony (Zeitoun and ...
There is currently no water cooperation between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Of the nine rivers that fl...
The final thesis Factor o f Water in Central Asia presents an analysis of the phenomena of trans-bou...
Transboundary river basins are by their nature surrounded by political discourses and negotiations a...
The article describes local realities and contextual circumstances in Afghanistan which are infuenci...
This paper analyses how control over transboundary water is being achieved in the Harirud/Tejen Rive...
This paper explores the geopolitical overlay that is shaping dynamic hydropolitical interactions of ...
A new article by Mohsen Nagheeby (IHE alumnus and PhD candidate at Northumbria University) and Jeroe...
Reports predict frighteningly serious escalations of the controversy between Afghanistan and its nei...
Afghanistan has five major river basins which four of them are transboundary and shared with Iran, P...
Border Rivers, as one of the most important natural terrain, are always the source of many differenc...
The water allocations in the Amu Darya Basin reflect the colonial legacy of the Soviet Union: the do...
The increasing structural and physical scarcity of water across the globe calls for a deeper underst...
The article seeks to expand the understanding of the emerging concept of hydrohegemony (Zeitoun and ...
The increasing structural and physical scarcity of water across the globe calls for a deeper underst...
The article seeks to expand the understanding of the emerging concept of hydrohegemony (Zeitoun and ...
There is currently no water cooperation between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Of the nine rivers that fl...
The final thesis Factor o f Water in Central Asia presents an analysis of the phenomena of trans-bou...
Transboundary river basins are by their nature surrounded by political discourses and negotiations a...
The article describes local realities and contextual circumstances in Afghanistan which are infuenci...