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Negotiating International Water Rights: Natural Resource Conflict in Turkey, Syria and Iraq


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Negotiating International Water Rights: Natural Resource Conflict in Turkey, Syria and Iraq

Contributors:

By (Author) Muserref Yetim

ISBN:

9781784535520

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

I.B. Tauris

Publication Date:

30th June 2016

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Public international law: environment
Drought and water supply

Dewey:

333.91

Physical Properties

Number of Pages:

256

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 234mm

Weight:

563g

Description

Transboundary watercourses account for an estimated 60 per cent of global freshwater flow and support the livelihoods of hundreds of millions of people worldwide. Yet the indeterminate status of water rights in many international watercourses presents a problem and many attempts to resolve water rights issue have failed. Knowing how and where negotiations fail is essential if successful resolution is to be achieved. Muserref Yetim's important book seeks to illustrate a means to the peaceful resolution of natural resource based conflicts. Through a detailed study of the Tigris-Euphrates water conflict, involving Turkey, Syria and Iraq, countries of vital security interest to the world at large, the author clarifies the collective action dilemmas confronting Middle Eastern watercourses and reveals the bargaining bottlenecks where negotiations fail. She develops an original framework that explains bargaining failures and proposes conditions for creating a new property rights regime among watercourse states that offers a route to governing their shared water resources in ways that are politically, economically and environmentally sound. In almost all water scarce regions, international water resources are subject to intense unilateral exploitation in a highly competitive fashion. And as demand for freshwater continues to increase, through increasing urbanization and the continuing development of societies, so the issue of how such shared water resources can best be governed is becoming vitally important. Negotiating International Water Rights offers both a timely contribution to a matter of international concern and important insights into resource conflict in countries of vital security interest to the world at large.

Author Bio

Muserref Yetim is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Politics at the New York University. Raised in Istanbul her research interests include natural resource conflict, international relations, environmental conflict, and the political economies of the Middle East and Latin America.

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