In this article the suggested permit and licence systems included in the draft Afghan Water Law of 2008 (superseding those laws of 1981 and 1991) are examined by comparing them with main canal data from two pilot studies within the Kunduz Basin. The comparison highlights the difficulty of making these proposed legal frameworks operative. Overall, it appears that the sections within the law on permits and licences are not implementable within or even useful for the traditional irrigation systems, but mainly play into the hands of the national hydrocracy and please international donor
Two major events transformed the political geography of the Aral Sea Basin (ASB) region a decade apa...
Transboundary river basins are by their nature surrounded by political discourses and negotiations a...
Fallowing three decades (before the Bone conference) political unrest and civil war, Afghanistan fac...
In this article the suggested permit and licence systems included in the draft Afghan Water Law of 2...
In this article the suggested permit and license systems included in the draft Afghan Water Law of 2...
The article describes local realities and contextual circumstances in Afghanistan which are infuenci...
This article examines the international legitimacy of unilateral dam development in an international...
International watercourses are a very significant part of the water resources endowment of Central A...
Over the past 25 years, there has been a sharp increase in the number and the intensity of use of mi...
Afghanistan has five major river basins which four of them are transboundary and shared with Iran, P...
Presented during the USCID water management conference held on October 13-16, 2004 in Salt Lake City...
There is a long-standing dispute between Iran and Afghanistan over the Helmand River. In recent year...
Taking Central Asia as its focus, this article discusses context-specific contemporary transboundary...
This article examines the international legitimacy of unilateral dam development in an international...
There is currently no water cooperation between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Of the nine rivers that fl...
Two major events transformed the political geography of the Aral Sea Basin (ASB) region a decade apa...
Transboundary river basins are by their nature surrounded by political discourses and negotiations a...
Fallowing three decades (before the Bone conference) political unrest and civil war, Afghanistan fac...
In this article the suggested permit and licence systems included in the draft Afghan Water Law of 2...
In this article the suggested permit and license systems included in the draft Afghan Water Law of 2...
The article describes local realities and contextual circumstances in Afghanistan which are infuenci...
This article examines the international legitimacy of unilateral dam development in an international...
International watercourses are a very significant part of the water resources endowment of Central A...
Over the past 25 years, there has been a sharp increase in the number and the intensity of use of mi...
Afghanistan has five major river basins which four of them are transboundary and shared with Iran, P...
Presented during the USCID water management conference held on October 13-16, 2004 in Salt Lake City...
There is a long-standing dispute between Iran and Afghanistan over the Helmand River. In recent year...
Taking Central Asia as its focus, this article discusses context-specific contemporary transboundary...
This article examines the international legitimacy of unilateral dam development in an international...
There is currently no water cooperation between Afghanistan and Pakistan. Of the nine rivers that fl...
Two major events transformed the political geography of the Aral Sea Basin (ASB) region a decade apa...
Transboundary river basins are by their nature surrounded by political discourses and negotiations a...
Fallowing three decades (before the Bone conference) political unrest and civil war, Afghanistan fac...