water resources

Water consumed upstream does not flow downstream. Consequently, upstream–downstream relations along a shared river may entail competitive use or even conflict. What is the role of communication in preventing or transforming such behaviour? The present article addresses this question based on lessons learned in three Dialogue Workshops carried out between 2002 and 2004 in the Eastern...

Global warming is likely to lead to a variety of changes in local climatic conditions, including potential increases in the frequency and intensity of extreme climatic events such as drought, floods, and storms. Present capacity to respond to and manage climatic variability, including extreme events, is an important component of adjustments to climatic changes. In particular, identifying...

M-POWER—the Mekong Program in Water, Environment and Resilience—is a programme of action research that aims to improve the quality of water governance in ways that support sustainable livelihoods in the Mekong Region. The acronym is a play on the verb “empower,” as this is an apt one-word description of motivation for engaging in action research about governance with a...

The author has provided a major compilation of data relating to all aspects of watershed functioning and management in the middle mountains of Nepal. This includes climatological, hydrological, soil science, sediment transfer, and socio economic data. It embraces is own research during a 5-year secondment to ICIMOD together ith the accumulation of a vast array of data from across the entire...

The International Water Management Institute (IWMI) is one of the great intellectual powerhouses of thought about water management.  This book is an edited volume written largely by researchers associated with IWMI.

Case studies come from France, Mexico, South Africa, Turkey, Vietnam and the USA. 

Water scarcity is a major issue in rural watersheds in the Middle Mountains of Nepal and in the entire Hindu Kush–Himalaya region. Dense population and heavy dependence on irrigated agriculture place immense pressure on available water resources, which have a distinct seasonality. New forms of management based on traditional and scientific knowledge must be introduced to solve problems...

Higher temperature and change in precipitation patterns have induced an acute decrease in Andean glaciers, thus leading to an additional stress on water supply. To adapt to climate changes, local governments need information on the rate of glacier volume losses and on current ice thickness. The authors show how volume changes can be accurately estimated in remote areas using...
High elevation páramo (wetland) ecosystems in the Andes are important water sources for local communities and downstream agricultural and urban users. These headwater catchments, however, are often impacted by human activities (eg agricultural production) that affect both stream water quality and flow. Knowledge about water availability, quality, and use is essential for effective management but...
This book contains 15 contributions around the broad theme of community water law and water resource management in the developing world and is part of the Comprehensive Assessment of Water Management in Agriculture series (www.iwini.cgiar.org/assessment/).
This book is the latest publication in the Advances in Global Change Research series published by Springer. It addresses the diverse challenges facing water resources within mountain environments, including temporal and spacial variability, competing demands, issues of potable water supply and the challenges of hazard management associated with shortages or excessive quantities of this valuable...

Страницы

Подписка на water resources