The Oxford Handbook of Water Politics and Policy
Herausgeber: Conca, Ken; Weinthal, Erika
The Oxford Handbook of Water Politics and Policy
Herausgeber: Conca, Ken; Weinthal, Erika
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Over twenty-seven chapters and a general introduction, The Oxford Handbook of Water Politics and Policy focuses on several themes: water poverty and health, water management, the politics of transboundary waters, water knowledge, and water equity and justice, among several others. Including a diverse group of leading scholars of water politics and policy, this volume addresses the ways climate change, the endurance of water poverty, and competition among rival users intensify challenges of governing water wisely, fairly, and efficiently.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- The Oxford Handbook of U.S. Social Policy69,99 €
- The Oxford Handbook of Nigerian Politics71,99 €
- The Oxford Companion to Politics in India41,99 €
- The Oxford Handbook of Populism52,99 €
- The Oxford Handbook of French Politics61,99 €
- Thom BrooksThe Oxford Handbook of Global Justice60,99 €
- The Oxford Handbook of Italian Politics62,99 €
-
-
-
Over twenty-seven chapters and a general introduction, The Oxford Handbook of Water Politics and Policy focuses on several themes: water poverty and health, water management, the politics of transboundary waters, water knowledge, and water equity and justice, among several others. Including a diverse group of leading scholars of water politics and policy, this volume addresses the ways climate change, the endurance of water poverty, and competition among rival users intensify challenges of governing water wisely, fairly, and efficiently.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 712
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. März 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 1116g
- ISBN-13: 9780197516966
- ISBN-10: 0197516963
- Artikelnr.: 58479748
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 712
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. März 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 1116g
- ISBN-13: 9780197516966
- ISBN-10: 0197516963
- Artikelnr.: 58479748
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Ken Conca is Professor of International Relations at the School of International Service at American University. He is the author or editor of seven books, including Governing Water and Confronting Consumption. Erika Weinthal is Lee Hill Snowdon Professor of Environmental Policy at the Nicholas School of the Environment at Duke University.
* Preface
* List of Contributors
* Part 1: Introduction
* 1. The Political Dimensions of Water
* Ken Conca and Erika Weinthal
* Part 2: Poverty, Rights, and Ethics
* 2. Water and Poverty: Pathways of Escape and Descent
* Ben Crow and Brent M. Swallow
* 3. Knowing Equity When We See It: Water Equity in Contemporary Global
Contexts
* Margaret Wilder and Helen Ingram
* 4. Gender and Water
* Barbara van Koppen
* 5. Monitoring the Progressive Realization of the Human Rights to
Water and Sanitation: Frontier Analysis as a Basis to Enhance Human
Rights Accountability
* Benjamin Mason Meier, Ryan Cronk, Jeanne Luh, Jamie Bartram, and
Catarina de Albuquerque
* 6. Indigenous Peoples and Water Justice in a Globalizing World
* Sue Jackson
* 7. Re-Imagined Communities: A New Ethical Approach to Water Policy
* Veronica Strang
* Part 3: Food, Energy, and Water
* 8. The Water-Energy-Food Nexus in Arid Regions: The Politics of
Problemsheds
* Martin Keulertz, Jeannie Sowers, Eckart Woertz, and Rabi Mohtar
* 9. The Nexus of Energy and Water Quality
* Erika Weinthal, Avner Vengosh, and Kate Neville
* 10. What is Food-water and Why Do We not Account for It?
* Martin Keulertz and Tony Allan
* 11. Unintended Water Allocation: Gaining Share from Indirect Action
and Inaction
* Virginia Hooper and Bruce Lankford
* Part 4: Water and the Politics of Scale
* 12. Why Scale Matters: Borderless Water and Bordered Thinking
* Alice Cohen
* 13. Local Water Politics
* Sara Hughes and Megan Mullin
* 14. Rethinking Urban Water (In)formality
* Malini Ranganathan
* Part 5: Law, Economics, and Water Management
* 15. Innovation and Trends in Water Law
* Philippe Cullet
* 16. The Economics of Water
* Jeffrey M. Peterson and Nathan Hendricks
* 17. The Political Economy of Water Markets: Property Rights and Path
Dependency in Rivers under Pressure
* Dustin Garrick and Jesper Svensson
* 18. The Business of Water
* Karen Bakker
* 19. China's Water Pricing Policies
* Zhong Ma, Dunhu Chang, and Fang Zhou
* Part 6: The Politics of Transboundary Waters
* 20. Managing Transboundary Rivers to Avert Conflict and Facilitate
Cooperation
* Neda Zawahri
* 21. Transboundary Unbound: Redefining Water Conflict and Cooperation
for Contemporary Challenges that Extend Beyond Watersheds, Regions,
and Water
* Jacob D. Petersen-Perlman, Julie E. Watson, and Aaron T. Wolf
* 22. "Something Has to Yield": Climate Change Transforming
Transboundary Water Governance (as We Know It)
* Joakim Öjendal and Gustav Aldén Rudd
* 23. River Basin Organizations and the Governance of Transboundary
Watercourses
* Andrea K. Gerlak and Susanne Schmeier
* 24. The Absence of Water Conflicts in the Developing World: Evidence
from Africa
* Clionadh Raleigh
* Part 7: The Politics of Water Knowledge
* 25. Adaptive Governance and Integrated Water Resources Management
* Mark Lubell and Carolina Balazs
* 26. Transfer, Diffusion, and Translation of Water Policy Models
* Farhad Mukhtarov and Katherine A. Daniell
* 27. Climate Information and Water Management: Building Adaptive
Capacity or Business as Usual?
* Maria Carmen Lemos and Christine J. Kirchhoff
* Index
* List of Contributors
* Part 1: Introduction
* 1. The Political Dimensions of Water
* Ken Conca and Erika Weinthal
* Part 2: Poverty, Rights, and Ethics
* 2. Water and Poverty: Pathways of Escape and Descent
* Ben Crow and Brent M. Swallow
* 3. Knowing Equity When We See It: Water Equity in Contemporary Global
Contexts
* Margaret Wilder and Helen Ingram
* 4. Gender and Water
* Barbara van Koppen
* 5. Monitoring the Progressive Realization of the Human Rights to
Water and Sanitation: Frontier Analysis as a Basis to Enhance Human
Rights Accountability
* Benjamin Mason Meier, Ryan Cronk, Jeanne Luh, Jamie Bartram, and
Catarina de Albuquerque
* 6. Indigenous Peoples and Water Justice in a Globalizing World
* Sue Jackson
* 7. Re-Imagined Communities: A New Ethical Approach to Water Policy
* Veronica Strang
* Part 3: Food, Energy, and Water
* 8. The Water-Energy-Food Nexus in Arid Regions: The Politics of
Problemsheds
* Martin Keulertz, Jeannie Sowers, Eckart Woertz, and Rabi Mohtar
* 9. The Nexus of Energy and Water Quality
* Erika Weinthal, Avner Vengosh, and Kate Neville
* 10. What is Food-water and Why Do We not Account for It?
* Martin Keulertz and Tony Allan
* 11. Unintended Water Allocation: Gaining Share from Indirect Action
and Inaction
* Virginia Hooper and Bruce Lankford
* Part 4: Water and the Politics of Scale
* 12. Why Scale Matters: Borderless Water and Bordered Thinking
* Alice Cohen
* 13. Local Water Politics
* Sara Hughes and Megan Mullin
* 14. Rethinking Urban Water (In)formality
* Malini Ranganathan
* Part 5: Law, Economics, and Water Management
* 15. Innovation and Trends in Water Law
* Philippe Cullet
* 16. The Economics of Water
* Jeffrey M. Peterson and Nathan Hendricks
* 17. The Political Economy of Water Markets: Property Rights and Path
Dependency in Rivers under Pressure
* Dustin Garrick and Jesper Svensson
* 18. The Business of Water
* Karen Bakker
* 19. China's Water Pricing Policies
* Zhong Ma, Dunhu Chang, and Fang Zhou
* Part 6: The Politics of Transboundary Waters
* 20. Managing Transboundary Rivers to Avert Conflict and Facilitate
Cooperation
* Neda Zawahri
* 21. Transboundary Unbound: Redefining Water Conflict and Cooperation
for Contemporary Challenges that Extend Beyond Watersheds, Regions,
and Water
* Jacob D. Petersen-Perlman, Julie E. Watson, and Aaron T. Wolf
* 22. "Something Has to Yield": Climate Change Transforming
Transboundary Water Governance (as We Know It)
* Joakim Öjendal and Gustav Aldén Rudd
* 23. River Basin Organizations and the Governance of Transboundary
Watercourses
* Andrea K. Gerlak and Susanne Schmeier
* 24. The Absence of Water Conflicts in the Developing World: Evidence
from Africa
* Clionadh Raleigh
* Part 7: The Politics of Water Knowledge
* 25. Adaptive Governance and Integrated Water Resources Management
* Mark Lubell and Carolina Balazs
* 26. Transfer, Diffusion, and Translation of Water Policy Models
* Farhad Mukhtarov and Katherine A. Daniell
* 27. Climate Information and Water Management: Building Adaptive
Capacity or Business as Usual?
* Maria Carmen Lemos and Christine J. Kirchhoff
* Index
* Preface
* List of Contributors
* Part 1: Introduction
* 1. The Political Dimensions of Water
* Ken Conca and Erika Weinthal
* Part 2: Poverty, Rights, and Ethics
* 2. Water and Poverty: Pathways of Escape and Descent
* Ben Crow and Brent M. Swallow
* 3. Knowing Equity When We See It: Water Equity in Contemporary Global
Contexts
* Margaret Wilder and Helen Ingram
* 4. Gender and Water
* Barbara van Koppen
* 5. Monitoring the Progressive Realization of the Human Rights to
Water and Sanitation: Frontier Analysis as a Basis to Enhance Human
Rights Accountability
* Benjamin Mason Meier, Ryan Cronk, Jeanne Luh, Jamie Bartram, and
Catarina de Albuquerque
* 6. Indigenous Peoples and Water Justice in a Globalizing World
* Sue Jackson
* 7. Re-Imagined Communities: A New Ethical Approach to Water Policy
* Veronica Strang
* Part 3: Food, Energy, and Water
* 8. The Water-Energy-Food Nexus in Arid Regions: The Politics of
Problemsheds
* Martin Keulertz, Jeannie Sowers, Eckart Woertz, and Rabi Mohtar
* 9. The Nexus of Energy and Water Quality
* Erika Weinthal, Avner Vengosh, and Kate Neville
* 10. What is Food-water and Why Do We not Account for It?
* Martin Keulertz and Tony Allan
* 11. Unintended Water Allocation: Gaining Share from Indirect Action
and Inaction
* Virginia Hooper and Bruce Lankford
* Part 4: Water and the Politics of Scale
* 12. Why Scale Matters: Borderless Water and Bordered Thinking
* Alice Cohen
* 13. Local Water Politics
* Sara Hughes and Megan Mullin
* 14. Rethinking Urban Water (In)formality
* Malini Ranganathan
* Part 5: Law, Economics, and Water Management
* 15. Innovation and Trends in Water Law
* Philippe Cullet
* 16. The Economics of Water
* Jeffrey M. Peterson and Nathan Hendricks
* 17. The Political Economy of Water Markets: Property Rights and Path
Dependency in Rivers under Pressure
* Dustin Garrick and Jesper Svensson
* 18. The Business of Water
* Karen Bakker
* 19. China's Water Pricing Policies
* Zhong Ma, Dunhu Chang, and Fang Zhou
* Part 6: The Politics of Transboundary Waters
* 20. Managing Transboundary Rivers to Avert Conflict and Facilitate
Cooperation
* Neda Zawahri
* 21. Transboundary Unbound: Redefining Water Conflict and Cooperation
for Contemporary Challenges that Extend Beyond Watersheds, Regions,
and Water
* Jacob D. Petersen-Perlman, Julie E. Watson, and Aaron T. Wolf
* 22. "Something Has to Yield": Climate Change Transforming
Transboundary Water Governance (as We Know It)
* Joakim Öjendal and Gustav Aldén Rudd
* 23. River Basin Organizations and the Governance of Transboundary
Watercourses
* Andrea K. Gerlak and Susanne Schmeier
* 24. The Absence of Water Conflicts in the Developing World: Evidence
from Africa
* Clionadh Raleigh
* Part 7: The Politics of Water Knowledge
* 25. Adaptive Governance and Integrated Water Resources Management
* Mark Lubell and Carolina Balazs
* 26. Transfer, Diffusion, and Translation of Water Policy Models
* Farhad Mukhtarov and Katherine A. Daniell
* 27. Climate Information and Water Management: Building Adaptive
Capacity or Business as Usual?
* Maria Carmen Lemos and Christine J. Kirchhoff
* Index
* List of Contributors
* Part 1: Introduction
* 1. The Political Dimensions of Water
* Ken Conca and Erika Weinthal
* Part 2: Poverty, Rights, and Ethics
* 2. Water and Poverty: Pathways of Escape and Descent
* Ben Crow and Brent M. Swallow
* 3. Knowing Equity When We See It: Water Equity in Contemporary Global
Contexts
* Margaret Wilder and Helen Ingram
* 4. Gender and Water
* Barbara van Koppen
* 5. Monitoring the Progressive Realization of the Human Rights to
Water and Sanitation: Frontier Analysis as a Basis to Enhance Human
Rights Accountability
* Benjamin Mason Meier, Ryan Cronk, Jeanne Luh, Jamie Bartram, and
Catarina de Albuquerque
* 6. Indigenous Peoples and Water Justice in a Globalizing World
* Sue Jackson
* 7. Re-Imagined Communities: A New Ethical Approach to Water Policy
* Veronica Strang
* Part 3: Food, Energy, and Water
* 8. The Water-Energy-Food Nexus in Arid Regions: The Politics of
Problemsheds
* Martin Keulertz, Jeannie Sowers, Eckart Woertz, and Rabi Mohtar
* 9. The Nexus of Energy and Water Quality
* Erika Weinthal, Avner Vengosh, and Kate Neville
* 10. What is Food-water and Why Do We not Account for It?
* Martin Keulertz and Tony Allan
* 11. Unintended Water Allocation: Gaining Share from Indirect Action
and Inaction
* Virginia Hooper and Bruce Lankford
* Part 4: Water and the Politics of Scale
* 12. Why Scale Matters: Borderless Water and Bordered Thinking
* Alice Cohen
* 13. Local Water Politics
* Sara Hughes and Megan Mullin
* 14. Rethinking Urban Water (In)formality
* Malini Ranganathan
* Part 5: Law, Economics, and Water Management
* 15. Innovation and Trends in Water Law
* Philippe Cullet
* 16. The Economics of Water
* Jeffrey M. Peterson and Nathan Hendricks
* 17. The Political Economy of Water Markets: Property Rights and Path
Dependency in Rivers under Pressure
* Dustin Garrick and Jesper Svensson
* 18. The Business of Water
* Karen Bakker
* 19. China's Water Pricing Policies
* Zhong Ma, Dunhu Chang, and Fang Zhou
* Part 6: The Politics of Transboundary Waters
* 20. Managing Transboundary Rivers to Avert Conflict and Facilitate
Cooperation
* Neda Zawahri
* 21. Transboundary Unbound: Redefining Water Conflict and Cooperation
for Contemporary Challenges that Extend Beyond Watersheds, Regions,
and Water
* Jacob D. Petersen-Perlman, Julie E. Watson, and Aaron T. Wolf
* 22. "Something Has to Yield": Climate Change Transforming
Transboundary Water Governance (as We Know It)
* Joakim Öjendal and Gustav Aldén Rudd
* 23. River Basin Organizations and the Governance of Transboundary
Watercourses
* Andrea K. Gerlak and Susanne Schmeier
* 24. The Absence of Water Conflicts in the Developing World: Evidence
from Africa
* Clionadh Raleigh
* Part 7: The Politics of Water Knowledge
* 25. Adaptive Governance and Integrated Water Resources Management
* Mark Lubell and Carolina Balazs
* 26. Transfer, Diffusion, and Translation of Water Policy Models
* Farhad Mukhtarov and Katherine A. Daniell
* 27. Climate Information and Water Management: Building Adaptive
Capacity or Business as Usual?
* Maria Carmen Lemos and Christine J. Kirchhoff
* Index