Design and impact of water treaties [electronic resource] : Managing climate change / by Matthew Zentner.
Series: Springer ThesesPublisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012Description: X, 214 p. online resourceContent type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9783642237430
- Earth sciences
- Environmental management
- Climate change
- Hydrogeology
- Atmospheric sciences
- Water pollution
- Earth Sciences
- Hydrogeology
- Water Policy/Water Governance/Water Management
- Climate Change/Climate Change Impacts
- Atmospheric Sciences
- Waste Water Technology / Water Pollution Control / Water Management / Aquatic Pollution
- Environmental Management
- 551.4 23
- GB1001-1199.8

Introduction -- Literature Review -- Hypotheses, Definitions, and Explanatory Mechanisms -- Data and Methods: Treaties, Power, Scarcity, and Conflict -- Results -- Case Studies-Application of the Results -- Conclusions.
This study presents a unique way to utilize the existing literature to explain the success of treaties in managing hydrologic stress. Literature-derived core concepts are summarized as seven treaty mechanisms categories (specificity, uncertainty management, enforcement, communications, flexibility, integrativeness, and scale) and are hypothesized as important for shaping the institutional resiliency of a treaty. Treaty design is shown to have a relevant and important role in shaping basin management so that nations may better achieve their goals in a changing climate.