A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Water Resources and Indicators of Conflict
Analysis of current economic and environmental trends reveals increasing competition over access to and use of freshwater resources at the same time that population growth, economic development, and potential climate change are adding stress to those resources. Given these trends, it is hardly surprising that in the policy literature and the popular press the issues of water and conflict are being raised together with increasing frequency. The Transboundary Freshwater Dispute Database (TFDD) project at Oregon State University delineates 261 international river basins. Professionals concerned with security-related issues have an interest in being able to identify which of those basins may be prone to conflict over water resources, from both a perspective of intra-state and inter-state instability and conflict. Having such knowledge allows for the possibility of “preventive diplomacy,” whereby diplomatic intervention prevents the escalation of disputes over shared water resources into violent conflict. Identification of basins prone to water conflict requires a framework that incorporates a wide array of physical, social, economic, and political variables, the implications of these variables at different spatial and temporal scales, and the linkages across scales. This paper proposes a methodology for defining potential indicators of international water conflict and portraying these indicators spatially within a Geographic Information System. Indicators will be defined across multiple scales in a parallel analysis of global and basin attributes. While indicators should be viewed with a healthy skepticism, they still provide value when defined through an effective analytical framework that takes into account the availability and appropriateness of relevant data and information sources.
Water Resources and Indicators of Conflict
Analysis of current economic and environmental trends reveals increasing competition over access to and use of freshwater resources at the same time that population growth, economic development, and potential climate change are adding stress to those resources. Given these trends, it is hardly surprising that in the policy literature and the popular press the issues of water and conflict are being raised together with increasing frequency. The Transboundary Freshwater Dispute Database (TFDD) project at Oregon State University delineates 261 international river basins. Professionals concerned with security-related issues have an interest in being able to identify which of those basins may be prone to conflict over water resources, from both a perspective of intra-state and inter-state instability and conflict. Having such knowledge allows for the possibility of “preventive diplomacy,” whereby diplomatic intervention prevents the escalation of disputes over shared water resources into violent conflict. Identification of basins prone to water conflict requires a framework that incorporates a wide array of physical, social, economic, and political variables, the implications of these variables at different spatial and temporal scales, and the linkages across scales. This paper proposes a methodology for defining potential indicators of international water conflict and portraying these indicators spatially within a Geographic Information System. Indicators will be defined across multiple scales in a parallel analysis of global and basin attributes. While indicators should be viewed with a healthy skepticism, they still provide value when defined through an effective analytical framework that takes into account the availability and appropriateness of relevant data and information sources.
Water Resources and Indicators of Conflict
Yoffe, Shira B. (author) / Ward, Brian S. (author)
Water International ; 24 ; 377-384
1999-12-01
8 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
Unknown
Water Resources and Indicators of Conflict: A Proposed Spatial Analysis
Online Contents | 1999
|Conflict and cooperation on trans-boundary water resources
Catalogue agriculture | 1998
|Developing Key Water Quality Indicators for Sustainable Water Resources Management
British Library Conference Proceedings | 2004
|Methodologies for Aggregating Indicators of Traffic Conflict
British Library Online Contents | 2011
|Using Indicators to Measure Water Resources Sustainability in California
British Library Conference Proceedings | 2013
|