Content
October 2019, Volume 44, Issue 6-7
- 641-646 Editors’ introduction
by Cathy Suykens & Herman Kasper Gilissen & Marleen van Rijswick - 647-666 An ecological perspective on a river’s rights: a recipe for more effective water quality governance?
by Susanne Wuijts & Jappe Beekman & Bas van der Wal & Cathy Suykens & Peter P. J. Driessen & Helena F. M. W. Van Rijswick - 667-683 On the problem of the justification of river rights
by Kenneth Kang - 684-700 The potential limitations on its basin decision-making processes of granting self-defence rights to Father Rhine
by Bettina Wilk & Dries L. T. Hegger & Carel Dieperink & Rakhyun E. Kim & Peter P. J. Driessen - 701-718 Towards a rights-based approach in EU international river basin governance? Lessons from the Scheldt and Ems Basins
by Herman Kasper Gilissen & Cathy Suykens & Maarten Kleinhans & Marleen van Rijswick & Karianne van der Werf - 719-735 Why the Ganga should not claim a right of the river
by Ipshita Chaturvedi - 736-751 Protection through property: from private to river-held rights
by Anne De Vries-Stotijn & Ilon Van Ham & Kees Bastmeijer - 752-768 Legal personality and economic livelihood of the Whanganui River: a call for community entrepreneurship
by Aikaterini Argyrou & Harry Hummels - 769-785 The changing face of river management in Victoria: The Yarra River Protection (Wilip-gin Birrarung murron) Act 2017 (Vic)
by Katie O’Bryan - 786-803 A case for granting legal personality to the Dutch part of the Wadden Sea
by Tineke Lambooy & Jan van de Venis & Christiaan Stokkermans - 804-829 Conferring legal personality on the world’s rivers: A brief intellectual assessment
by Gabriel Eckstein & Ariella D’Andrea & Virginia Marshall & Erin O’Donnell & Julia Talbot-Jones & Deborah Curran & Katie O’Bryan
July 2019, Volume 44, Issue 5
- 489-495 Editorial
by Thomas Hartmann & Willemijn van Doorn-Hoekveld & Marleen van Rijswick & Tejo Spit - 496-519 The levee effect along the Jamuna River in Bangladesh
by Md Ruknul Ferdous & Anna Wesselink & Luigia Brandimarte & Giuliano Di Baldassarre & Md Mizanur Rahman - 520-538 Managing flood risk in shrinking cities: dilemmas for urban development from the Central European perspective
by Pavel Raška & Monika Stehlíková & Kristýna Rybová & Tereza Aubrechtová - 539-553 The effects of tailor-made flood risk advice for homeowners in Flanders, Belgium
by Peter Davids & Luuk Boelens & Barbara Tempels - 554-570 More than a one-size-fits-all approach – tailoring flood risk communication to plural residents’ perspectives
by Karin A. W. Snel & Patrick A. Witte & Thomas Hartmann & Stan C. M. Geertman - 571-587 Deconstructing the legal framework for flood protection in Austria: individual and state responsibilities from a planning perspective
by Magdalena Rauter & Arthur Schindelegger & Sven Fuchs & Thomas Thaler - 588-606 Too much water, not enough water: planning and property rights considerations for linking flood management and groundwater recharge
by Thomas Jacobson - 607-621 Dealing with distributional effects of flood risk management in China: compensation mechanisms in flood retention areas
by L. Dai & W. J. van Doorn-Hoekveld & R. Y. Wang & H. F. M. W. van Rijswick - 622-639 Sticks and carrots for reducing property-level risks from floods: an EU–US comparative perspective
by C. B. R. Suykens & D. Tarlock & S. J. Priest & W. J. Doorn-Hoekveld & H. F. M. W. van Rijswick
May 2019, Volume 44, Issue 4
- 379-381 Editors’ introduction
by James E. Nickum & Raya Marina Stephan - 382-407 Water governance research in Africa: progress, challenges and an agenda for research and action
by Ayodele Olagunju & Gladman Thondhlana & Jania Said Chilima & Aby Sène-Harper & W.R. Nadège Compaoré & Ehimai Ohiozebau - 408-426 Understanding the non-institutionalization of a socio-technical innovation: the case of multiple-use water services (MUS) in Nepal
by Floriane Clement & Prachanda Pradhan & Barbara Van Koppen - 427-443 Federal reserved rights and California's Groundwater Management Act: resolving groundwater rights tensions in California and the western United States
by Stefanie Viktoria Caroline Schulte - 444-462 ‘Hotel Middle East’: social shocks and adaptation in Jordan’s domestic water sector
by Natasha Westheimer & Michael Gilmont & Troy Sternberg - 463-485 Why are there so few basin-wide treaties? Economics and politics of coalition formation in multilateral international river basins
by Ariel Dinar & Lucia De Stefano & Getachew Nigatu & Neda Zawahri - 486-488 Transboundary hydro-governance: from conflict to shared management
by Renée Martin-Nagle
April 2019, Volume 44, Issue 3
- 255-257 Bridging science and policy: legal perspectives
by Mara Tignino & Raya Marina Stephan & Renée Martin-Nagle & Owen McIntyre - 258-277 The future of domestic water law: trends and developments revisited, and where reform is headed
by Stefano Burchi - 278-291 The adaptation potential of water law in Canada: changing existing water use entitlements
by Deborah Curran - 292-301 Proof of sufficient water resources as a prerequisite for the authorization of new urban developments: the Spanish model
by Roberto O. Bustillo Bolado & Laura Movilla Pateiro - 302-320 Understanding water disputes in Chile with text and data mining tools
by Mauricio Herrera & Cristian Candia & Diego Rivera & Douglas Aitken & Daniel Brieba & Camila Boettiger & Guillermo Donoso & Alex Godoy-Faúndez - 321-336 Bringing back ecological flows: migratory fish, hydropower and legal maladaptivity in the governance of Finnish rivers
by Niko Soininen & Antti Belinskij & Anssi Vainikka & Hannu Huuskonen - 337-353 Forestry management and water law: comparing Ecuador and Arizona
by Andrés Martínez Moscoso & Rhett Larson - 354-362 Factors identifying aquifers with a high probability of management success
by Eric L. Garner - 363-377 The evolving framework for transboundary cooperation in the Nubian Sandstone Aquifer System
by Elena Quadri
February 2019, Volume 44, Issue 2
- 81-94 Rural–urban water struggles: urbanizing hydrosocial territories and evolving connections, discourses and identities
by Lena Hommes & Rutgerd Boelens & Leila M. Harris & Gert Jan Veldwisch - 95-114 Water crisis through the analytic of urban transformation: an analysis of Bangalore’s hydrosocial regimes
by Michael Goldman & Devika Narayan - 115-128 The rural–urban equity nexus of Metro Manila’s water system
by Philamer C. Torio & Leila M. Harris & Leonora C. Angeles - 129-147 Hydrosocial territories in the context of diverse and changing ruralities: the case of Cochabamba’s drinking water provision over time
by Paul Hoogendam - 148-168 Colonizing rural waters: the politics of hydro-territorial transformation in the Guadalhorce Valley, Málaga, Spain
by Bibiana Duarte-Abadía & Rutgerd Boelens - 169-187 The political construction and fixing of water overabundance: rural–urban flood-risk politics in coastal Ecuador
by Juan Pablo Hidalgo-Bastidas & Rutgerd Boelens - 188-205 Upsetting the apple cart? Export fruit production, water pollution and social unrest in the Elgin Valley, South Africa
by Matthijs Wessels & Gert Jan Veldwisch & Katarzyna Kujawa & Brian Delcarme - 206-223 Hydrosocial territories, agro-export and water scarcity: capitalist territorial transformations and water governance in Peru’s coastal valleys
by Gerardo Damonte & Rutgerd Boelens - 224-242 Payment for ecosystem services in Lima’s watersheds: power and imaginaries in an urban-rural hydrosocial territory
by Sonja Bleeker & Jeroen Vos - 243-253 Evolving connections, discourses and identities in rural–urban water struggles
by Lena Hommes & Gert Jan Veldwisch & Leila M. Harris & Rutgerd Boelens
January 2019, Volume 44, Issue 1
- 1-2 Letter from the IWRA President
by Gabriel Eckstein - 3-5 Editors’ Introduction
by Raya Marina Stephan & James E. Nickum - 6-13 An analysis of the framings of water scarcity in the Jordanian national water strategy
by Hussam Hussein - 14-30 Policy factors explaining the failure of delegated management in water supply: evidence from Ghana
by Silas Mvulirwenande & Uta Wehn & Guy Alaerts - 31-50 The limits to participation: branch-canal water user associations in the Egyptian Delta
by Edwin Rap & Francois Molle & Doaa Ezzat El-Agha & Waleed Abou El Hassan - 51-73 Impact of agricultural development on evapotranspiration trends in the irrigated districts of Pakistan: evidence from 1981 to 2012
by Mobin-ud-Din Ahmad & J. M. Kirby & M. J. M. Cheema - 74-76 Transboundary groundwater resources: sustainable management and conflict resolution
by Jac van der Gun - 77-80 The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam and the Nile Basin: implications for transboundary water cooperation
by Hussam Hussein
November 2018, Volume 43, Issue 8
- 1017-1025 Putting water security to work: addressing global challenges
by Chad Staddon & Christopher A. Scott - 1026-1039 Is water security just? Concepts, tools and missing links
by Sarah Wade - 1040-1054 Contested access: improving water security through benefit sharing
by Bimo A. Nkhata - 1055-1074 Water security and the pursuit of food, energy, and earth systems resilience
by Christopher A. Scott & Tamee R. Albrecht & Rafael De Grenade & Adriana Zuniga-Teran & Robert G. Varady & Bhuwan Thapa - 1075-1113 Unraveling transboundary water security in the arid Americas
by Tamee R. Albrecht & Robert G. Varady & Adriana A. Zuniga-Teran & Andrea K. Gerlak & Rafael Routson De Grenade & América Lutz-Ley & Facundo Martín & Sharon B. Megdal & Francisco Meza & Diego Ocampo Melgar & Nicolás Pineda & Facundo Rojas & Rossi Taboada & Bram Willems - 1114-1135 Why doesn’t every family practice rainwater harvesting? Factors that affect the decision to adopt rainwater harvesting as a household water security strategy in central Uganda
by Chad Staddon & Josh Rogers & Calum Warriner & Sarah Ward & Wayne Powell
October 2018, Volume 43, Issue 7
- 905-907 Editors’ introduction
by Raya Marina Stephan & James E. Nickum - 908-925 Regulation reform process and perception in the Palestinian water sector
by Raya Nour & Mohammad Al-Saidi - 926-942 Evaluating spatial and seasonal determinants of residential water demand across different housing types through data integration
by Saeed Ghavidelfar & Asaad Y. Shamseldin & Bruce W. Melville - 943-962 The coordination of routine and emergency water resources management: progress in China
by Weiwei Shao & Lin Luo & Jianhua Wang & Jiahong Liu & Jinjun Zhou & Chenyao Xiang & Hao Wang - 963-977 Institutional factors affecting fish passage in the Columbia River Treaty renegotiation
by Graeme A. Lee Rowlands & Richard A. Wildman - 978-995 Transboundary governance in the La Plata River basin: status and prospects
by Pilar Carolina Villar & Wagner Costa Ribeiro & Fernanda Mello Sant’Anna - 996-1015 Progress beyond policy making? Assessing the performance of Dutch-German cross-border cooperation in Deltarhine
by Tobias Renner & Sander Meijerink & Pieter van der Zaag
August 2018, Volume 43, Issue 6
- 717-730 Virtual water: its implications on agriculture and trade
by Chittaranjan Ray & David McInnes & Matthew Sanderson - 731-745 The water footprint of the EU: quantification, sustainability and relevance
by Davy Vanham - 746-761 The exposure of a fresh fruit and vegetable supply chain to global water-related risks
by Tim Hess & Chloe Sutcliffe - 762-784 Advising Morocco: adopting recommendations of a water footprint assessment would increase risk and impair food security for the country and its farmers
by Dennis Wichelns - 785-795 Future crop yields and water productivity changes for Nebraska rainfed and irrigated crops
by Yaqiong Lu & Xianyu Yang & Lara Kueppers - 796-814 Can Sub-Saharan Africa feed itself? The role of irrigation development in the region’s drylands for food security
by Hua Xie & Nicostrato Perez & Weston Anderson & Claudia Ringler & Liangzhi You - 815-828 Sustainability of aquifers supporting irrigated agriculture: a case study of the High Plains aquifer in Kansas
by James J. Butler & Donald O. Whittemore & B. Brownie Wilson & Geoffrey C. Bohling - 829-845 Irrigation variability and climate change affect derived distributions of simulated water recharge and nitrate leaching
by Timothy R. Green & Saseendran S. Anapalli - 846-859 The water footprint challenge for water resources management in Chilean arid zones
by Pablo Álvarez - 860-870 The effect of diet changes and food loss reduction in reducing the water footprint of an average American
by Mesfin M. Mekonnen & Julian Fulton - 871-886 Water footprint for Korean rice products and virtual water trade in a water-energy-food nexus
by Sang-Hyun Lee & Jin-Yong Choi & Seung-Hwan Yoo & Rabi H. Mohtar - 887-891 Water footprint of beef production on Texas High Plains pasture
by Charles P. West & Lisa L. Baxter - 892-903 Tradeoffs in the water-energy- food nexus in the urbanizing Asia-Pacific region
by Makoto Taniguchi & Naoki Masuhara & Shun Teramoto
July 2018, Volume 43, Issue 5
- 551-552 Editors’ introduction to the issue
by Raya Marina Stephan & James E. Nickum - 553-569 How does water information flow? Intersectionality in water information networks in a rural Ugandan community
by Sara Dewachter & Nathalie Holvoet & Katrien Van Aelst - 570-590 Strategies for coping with inadequate domestic water supply in Abuja, Nigeria
by Ismaila Rimi Abubakar - 591-602 A participatory methodology for future scenario analysis of sub-national water and sanitation access: case study of Kisumu, Kenya
by Heather D. Price & Lorna G. Okotto & Joseph Okotto-Okotto & Steve Pedley & Jim Wright - 603-619 Coping with water supply interruptions: can citizen voice in transdisciplinary research make a difference?
by Nicholas G. Hamer & Liema Lipile & Mbulelo Lipile & Lara Molony & Xolelwa Nzwana & Jay O’Keeffe & Sheona E. Shackleton & Matthew Weaver & Carolyn G. Palmer - 620-621 Introduction
by Selina Ho - 622-641 China’s ‘old’ and ‘new’ Mekong River politics: the Lancang-Mekong Cooperation from a comparative benefit-sharing perspective
by Sebastian Biba - 642-664 Multi-track water diplomacy: current and potential future cooperation over the Brahmaputra River Basin
by Yumiko Yasuda & Douglas Hill & Dipankar Aich & Patrick Huntjens & Ashok Swain - 665-695 The Heilongjiang (Amur) River in Sino-Russian relations: from conflict towards cooperation
by Wan Wang & Xing Li - 696-712 Assessing the Indus Waters Treaty from a comparative perspective
by Neda Zawahri & David Michel - 713-716 Freshwater access from a human rights perspective: a challenge to international water and human rights law
by Scott O. McKenzie
May 2018, Volume 43, Issue 4
- 483-493 Water justice: why it matters and how to achieve it
by Farhana Sultana - 494-511 Two decades of Brazil’s participatory model for water resources management: from enthusiasm to frustration
by P. A. C. Libanio - 512-530 India’s water policy response to climate change
by Matthew I. England - 531-547 Service levels for the four billion people with piped water on premises
by Neil S. Grigg - 548-549 Changes in the Water International Editorial Team
by The Editors - 549-549 Nominations Are Open for 2019-2021 IWRA Executive Board
by The Editors - 550-550 Policy Briefs series
by The Editors
April 2018, Volume 43, Issue 3
- 101-101 Corrigendum
by The Editors - 323-326 The wicked problems of water quality governance
by Henning Bjornlund & James E. Nickum & Raya Marina Stephan - 327-335 IWRA’s water quality project, including the report Developing a Global Compendium on Water Quality Guidelines
by Heather Bond - 336-348 Wicked problems facing integrated water quality management: what IWRA experts tell us
by James E. Nickum & Henning Bjornlund & Raya Marina Stephan - 349-360 Water quality management from source to sea: from global commitments to coordinated implementation
by Birgitta Liss Lymer & Joshua Weinberg & Torkil Jønch Clausen - 361-384 Adaptive or aspirational? Governance of diffuse water pollution affecting Australia’s Great Barrier Reef
by Poh-Ling Tan & Fran Humphries - 385-403 The social discourses on market-based instruments to manage non-point-source water pollution in the Oldman River basin, southern Alberta
by Gillian Kerr & Henning Bjornlund - 404-423 Minamata: how a policy maker addressed a very wicked water quality policy problem
by Hikaru Kobayashi - 424-435 Water laws of Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine: current problems and integration with EU legislation
by Yuliya Vystavna & Maryna Cherkashyna & Michael R. van der Valk - 436-459 Poor water service quality in developed countries may have a greater impact on lower-income households
by Anna Robak & Henning Bjornlund - 460-471 Farmer perceptions regarding irrigation with treated wastewater in the West Bank, Tunisia, and Qatar
by Anne Dare & Rabi H. Mohtar - 472-479 Water–energy–food nexus: a platform for implementing the Sustainable Development Goals
by Raya Marina Stephan & Rabi H. Mohtar & Bassel Daher & Antonio Embid Irujo & Astrid Hillers & J. Carl Ganter & Louise Karlberg & Liber Martin & Saeed Nairizi & Diego J. Rodriguez & Will Sarni - 480-481 Water is for fighting over, and other myths about water in the west
by Jeremy J. Schmidt
February 2018, Volume 43, Issue 2
- 133-144 Climate change and adaptive water management: innovative solutions from the global South
by Charlotte MacAlister & Nidhi Subramanyam - 145-164 Synergy of climate change and local pressures on saltwater intrusion in coastal urban areas: effective adaptation for policy planning
by A. Safi & G. Rachid & M. El-Fadel & J. Doummar & M. Abou Najm & I. Alameddine - 165-182 Determinants of livelihood vulnerability in farming communities in two sites in the Asian Highlands
by Nani Maiya Sujakhu & Sailesh Ranjitkar & Rabin Raj Niraula & Muhammad Asad Salim & Arjumand Nizami & Dietrich Schmidt-Vogt & Jianchu Xu - 183-204 Comparison of community-based adaptation strategies for droughts and floods in Kenya and the Central African Republic
by Cyriaque-Rufin Nguimalet - 205-216 Informal water markets and community management in peri-urban Luanda, Angola
by Allan Cain - 217-236 Household economic burden from seawater intrusion in coastal urban areas
by I. Alameddine & R. Tarhini & Mutasem El-Fadel - 237-256 Water option contracts for climate change adaptation in Santiago, Chile
by Sebastián Vicuña & Marina Gil & Oscar Melo & Guillermo Donoso & Pablo Merino - 257-280 Managing the risks from the water-related impacts of extreme weather and uncertain climate change on inland aquaculture in Northern Thailand
by Louis Lebel & Phimphakan Lebel & Chanagun Chitmanat & Anuwat Uppanunchai & Chusit Apirumanekul - 281-304 Adapting to climate change in rapidly urbanizing river basins: insights from a multiple-concerns, multiple-stressors, and multi-level approach
by Sharachchandra Lele & Veena Srinivasan & Bejoy K. Thomas & Priyanka Jamwal - 305-321 Assessing the economic impact of a low-cost water-saving irrigation technology in Indian Punjab: the tensiometer
by Kamal Vatta & R. S. Sidhu & Upmanu Lall & P. S. Birthal & Garima Taneja & Baljinder Kaur & Naresh Devineni & Charlotte MacAlister - 322-322 Corrigendum
by The Editors
January 2018, Volume 43, Issue 1
- 1-4 Editors’ foreword
by Aziza Akhmouch & Delphine Clavreul & Sarah Hendry & Sharon B. Megdal & James E. Nickum & Francisco Nunes-Correia & Andrew Ross - 5-12 Introducing the OECD Principles on Water Governance
by Aziza Akhmouch & Delphine Clavreul & Peter Glas - 13-33 Addressing the policy-implementation gaps in water services: the key role of meso-institutions
by Claude Ménard & Alejandro Jimenez & Hakan Tropp - 34-59 Stakeholder engagement in water governance as social learning: lessons from practice
by Uta Wehn & Kevin Collins & Kim Anema & Laura Basco-Carrera & Alix Lerebours - 60-89 OECD Principles on Water Governance in practice: an assessment of existing frameworks in Europe, Asia-Pacific, Africa and South America
by Susana Neto & Jeff Camkin & Andrew Fenemor & Poh-Ling Tan & Jaime Melo Baptista & Marcia Ribeiro & Roland Schulze & Sabine Stuart-Hill & Chris Spray & Rahmah Elfithri - 90-108 Functions of OECD Water Governance Principles in assessing water governance practices: assessing the Dutch Flood Protection Programme
by Chris Seijger & Stijn Brouwer & Arwin van Buuren & Herman Kasper Gilissen & Marleen van Rijswick & Michelle Hendriks - 109-132 The evolution of water governance in France from the 1960s: disputes as major drivers for radical changes within a consensual framework
by Marine Colon & Sophie Richard & Pierre-Alain Roche
November 2017, Volume 42, Issue 8
- 929-944 Assessing the legitimacy of flood risk governance arrangements in Europe: insights from intra-country evaluations
by Maria Pettersson & Marleen van Rijswick & Cathy Suykens & Meghan Alexander & Kristina Ek & Sally Priest - 945-966 A cooperative framework for optimizing transboundary hydropower development
by Seemanta Sharma Bhagabati & Akiyuki Kawasaki & Mukand Singh Babel - 967-980 Comparison of water pricing for publicly and privately owned water utilities in the United States
by Isaac W. Wait & William Adam Petrie - 981-999 Trend and variability of rainfall in two river basins in Sri Lanka: an analysis of meteorological data and farmers’ perceptions
by L. Muthuwatta & H. P. T. W. Perera & N. Eriyagama & K. B. N. Upamali Surangika & W. W. Premachandra - 1000-1021 The politics of water reform and environmental sustainability in the Murray–Darling Basin
by James Horne - 1022-1036 Assessment of fog-water collection on the eastern escarpment of Eritrea
by Mussie Fessehaye & Sabah A. Abdul-Wahab & Michael J. Savage & Thomas Kohler & Tseggai Gherezghiher & Hans Hurni
October 2017, Volume 42, Issue 7
- 777-793 Shipping water across the US–Mexico border: international governance dimensions of desalination for export
by Stephen P. Mumme & Jamie McEvoy & Nicolas Pineda & Margaret Wilder - 794-809 A user-centred approach to irrigation performance: drip irrigation in the Khrichfa area, Morocco
by Saskia van der Kooij & Marcel Kuper & Margreet Z. Zwarteveen & Charlotte M. S. de Fraiture - 810-830 Participatory rural appraisal to assess groundwater resources in Al-Mujaylis, Tihama Coastal Plain, Yemen
by Wahib Al-Qubatee & Henk Ritzema & Adel Al-Weshali & Frank van Steenbergen & Petra J. G. J. Hellegers - 831-851 The effect of physical accessibility and service level of water supply on economic accessibility: a case study of Bandung City, Indonesia
by Anindrya Nastiti & Arief Sudradjat & Gertjan W. Geerling & A.J.M Smits & Dwina Roosmini & Barti Setiani Muntalif - 852-873 Effects of hydrological changes on cooperation in transnational catchments: the case of the Syr Darya
by D. Bocchiola & M. G. Pelosi & A. Soncini - 874-892 Actual and perceived causes of flood risk: climate versus anthropogenic effects in a wet zone catchment in Sri Lanka
by Nishadi Eriyagama & Madusanka Thilakarathne & Praveen Tharuka & Tharindu Munaweera & Lal Muthuwatta & Vladimir Smakhtin & Wickrama Waththage Premachandra & Dhammi Pindeniya & N. S. Wijayarathne & Lakshika Udamulla - 893-902 Riparianization of the Mekong River Commission
by Andrea K. Gerlak & Andrea Haefner - 903-903 IWRA’s new and (to amend and replace the 1971 Articles of Incorporation [Constitution] and 2009 Bylaws): A note from the Secretary-General
by Guy Fradin - 904-924 Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation of International Water Resources Association, Inc
by The Editors - 925-927 Cancun Declaration
by The Editors
August 2017, Volume 42, Issue 6
- 641-645 Introduction to ‘Groundwater and Climate Change: Multi-level Law and Policy Perspectives’
by Philippe Cullet & Raya Marina Stephan - 646-662 Regulating the interactions between climate change and groundwater: lessons from India
by Philippe Cullet & Lovleen Bhullar & Sujith Koonan - 663-677 Assessing India’s drip-irrigation boom: efficiency, climate change and groundwater policy
by Trevor Birkenholtz - 678-690 Climate change, groundwater and the law: exploring the connections in South Africa
by Michael Kidd - 691-708 Groundwater law, abstraction, and responding to climate change: assessing recent law reforms in British Columbia and England
by Birsha Ohdedar - 709-724 EU legal protection for ecologically significant groundwater in the context of climate change vulnerability
by Owen McIntyre - 725-740 Groundwater use in North Africa as a cautionary tale for climate change adaptation
by Marcel Kuper & Hichem Amichi & Pierre-Louis Mayaux - 741-756 Global climate change and global groundwater law: their independent and pluralistic evolution and potential challenges
by Joyeeta Gupta & Kirstin Conti - 757-772 Climate change considerations under international groundwater law
by Raya Marina Stephan - 773-776 A call for a new business model valuing water use and production: the Water, Energy and Food Nexus holistic system approach
by Rabi H. Mohtar
July 2017, Volume 42, Issue 5
- 505-526 Specification of a human right to water: a sustainability assessment of access hurdles
by Erik Gawel & Wolfgang Bretschneider - 527-542 Politics of the Dead Sea Canal: a historical review of the evolving discourses, interests, and plans
by Hussam Hussein - 543-567 Urban water demand, climatic variation, and irrigation-water insecurity: interactive stressors and lessons for water governance from the Angat River basin (Philippines)
by Sameer H. Shah & Hisham Zerriffi - 568-584 Assessing the environmental context of hand washing among school children in Limpopo, South Africa
by Nicola Bulled & Kara Poppe & Khuliso Ramatsisti & Londolani Sitsula & Geoffrey Winegar & Jabulani Gumbo & Rebecca Dillingham & James Smith - 585-598 Quality matters: incorporating water quality into water access monitoring in rural Malawi
by Sarah L. Smiley - 599-617 Use of coal seam water for agriculture in Queensland, Australia
by David Monckton & Jim Cavaye & Neil Huth & Sue Vink - 618-631 A review of the current status of small-scale seawater reverse osmosis desalination
by Jie Song & Tian Li & Lucía Wright-Contreras & Adrian Wing-Keung Law - 632-636 Acceptance addresses for the Crystal Drop Awards
by The Editors - 637-640 Water International Best Paper 2016 Awards
by The Editors
May 2017, Volume 42, Issue 4
- 349-359 Challenges in meeting water security and resilience
by Vijay P. Singh - 360-371 The 1997 United Nations Convention on the Law of Non-navigational Uses of International Watercourses: what contribution to the development of the Water Charter for the Volta Basin?
by Amidou Garane & Charles Biney & Eléonore Belemlilga - 372-384 Evaluating knowledge and capacity development in the water sector: challenges and progress
by Silas Mvulirwenande & Uta Wehn & Guy Alaerts - 385-399 Promoting and assessing water governance at subnational level: the experience of Brazil’s National Water Management Pact
by P.A.C. Libanio - 400-424 Future bottlenecks in international river basins: where transboundary institutions, population growth and hydrological variability intersect
by Marloes H.N. Bakker & James A. Duncan - 425-442 The EU Water Initiative at 15: origins, processes and assessment
by Oliver Fritsch & Camilla Adelle & David Benson - 443-461 Fighting over water values: diverse framings of flower and food production with communal irrigation in the Ecuadorian Andes
by Patricio Mena-Vásconez & Linden Vincent & Jeroen Vos & Rutgerd Boelens - 462-485 Influence of disaster risk, exposure and water quality on vulnerability of surface water resources under a changing climate in the Haihe River basin
by Wei Shi & Jun Xia & Christopher J Gippel & JunXu Chen & Si Hong - 486-494 Issues and challenges of reclaimed water usage: a case study of the dragon-shaped river in the Beijing Olympic Park
by Xiaoqin Zhou & Zifu Li & Chad Staddon & Xuejun Wu & Han Song - 495-503 Water-food-energy nexus index to maximize the economic water and energy productivity in an optimal cropping pattern
by Inas El Gafy & Neil Grigg & Waskom Reagan
April 2017, Volume 42, Issue 3
- 241-253 Engineered rivers in arid lands: searching for sustainability in theory and practice
by Aysegül Kibaroglu & Jurgen Schmandt & George Ward - 254-270 The political ontology of collaborative water governance
by Cameron Harrington - 271-290 Managing resources through stakeholder networks: collaborative water governance for Lake Naivasha basin, Kenya
by Job Ochieng Ogada & George Okoye Krhoda & Anne Van Der Veen & Martin Marani & Pieter Richards van Oel - 291-307 Harnessing the sun for an evergreen revolution: a study of solar-powered irrigation in Bihar, India
by Avinash Kishore & PK Joshi & Divya Pandey - 308-323 Urban water pricing in Yemen: a comparison of increasing block tariffs to other pricing schemes
by M. Al-Saidi - 324-332 Flood hazard maps in the European context
by Michael Nones - 333-338 Ongoing dialogues with Erik Swyngedouw about desalination in Spain
by Leandro del Moral & Julia Martínez-Fernández & Nuria Hernández-Mora - 339-341 The pleasures of hydro-controversies: a reply to Leandro del Moral, Julia Martínez and Nuria Hernández-Mora
by Erik Swyngedouw & Joseph Williams - 342-345 Dustin Evan Garrick
by James E. Nickum - 346-348 Water International Best Paper 2015 Awards
by The Editors
February 2017, Volume 42, Issue 2
- 97-104 Introduction to ‘Transboundary River Cooperation: Actors, Strategies and Impact’
by Selina Ho - 105-120 International water conflict and cooperation: challenges and opportunities
by Jacob D. Petersen-Perlman & Jennifer C. Veilleux & Aaron T. Wolf - 121-141 Infrastructure development and the economics of cooperation in the Eastern Nile
by Marc Jeuland & Xun Wu & Dale Whittington - 142-162 China’s transboundary river policies towards Kazakhstan: issue-linkages and incentives for cooperation
by Selina Ho - 163-186 River activism, policy entrepreneurship and transboundary water disputes in Asia
by Pichamon Yeophantong - 187-206 Dam diplomacy? China’s new neighbourhood policy and Chinese dam-building companies
by Carla P. Freeman - 207-221 The remarkable restoration of the Rhine: plural rationalities in regional water politics
by Marco Verweij - 222-239 The dilemma of autonomy: decentralization and water politics at the subnational level
by Scott M. Moore - 240-240 Crystal Drop Award and Ven Te Chow Memorial Lecture
by The Editors
January 2017, Volume 42, Issue 1
- 1-17 Mortality awareness and water decisions: a social psychological analysis of supply-management, demand-management and soft-path paradigms
by S. E. Wolfe & David B. Brooks - 18-33 Incorporation of environmental flows in water allocation in Texas
by Ralph A. Wurbs - 34-53 The river-border complex: a border-integrated approach to transboundary river governance illustrated by the Ganges River and Indo-Bangladeshi border
by Kimberley Anh Thomas - 54-72 Envisioning the future of cooperation on common rivers in South Asia: a cooperative security approach by Bangladesh and India to the Tipaimukh Dam
by Mirza Sadaqat Huda - 73-91 The social conditions of self-organized utilities: water cooperatives in La Paz and El Alto, Bolivia
by Franck Poupeau & Sébastien Hardy