Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- List of Sidebars
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Special Contributors
- Introduction
- A Note on the OSU Transboundary Freshwater Dispute Database
- 1 Background, trends, and concepts
- 2 Water wars, water reality: Reframing the debate on transboundary water disputes, hydropolitics, and preventive hydrodiplomacy
- 3 Water conflict management: Theory and practice
- 4 Crafting institutions: Law, treaties, and shared benefits
- 5 Public participation, institutional capacity, and river basin organizations for managing conflict
- 6 Lessons learned: Patterns and issues
- 7 Water conflict prevention and resolution: Where to from here?
- Appendices
- A 1997 convention and ILC draft rules on international groundwater
- B River basin organizations
- C Case studies of transboundary dispute resolution
- D International water pricing: An overview and historic and modern case studies
- E Treaties with groundwater provisions
- F Treaties with water quality provisions
- G Treaties that delineate water allocations
- Bibliography
- Author Index
- Subject Index
D - International water pricing: An overview and historic and modern case studies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- List of Sidebars
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Special Contributors
- Introduction
- A Note on the OSU Transboundary Freshwater Dispute Database
- 1 Background, trends, and concepts
- 2 Water wars, water reality: Reframing the debate on transboundary water disputes, hydropolitics, and preventive hydrodiplomacy
- 3 Water conflict management: Theory and practice
- 4 Crafting institutions: Law, treaties, and shared benefits
- 5 Public participation, institutional capacity, and river basin organizations for managing conflict
- 6 Lessons learned: Patterns and issues
- 7 Water conflict prevention and resolution: Where to from here?
- Appendices
- A 1997 convention and ILC draft rules on international groundwater
- B River basin organizations
- C Case studies of transboundary dispute resolution
- D International water pricing: An overview and historic and modern case studies
- E Treaties with groundwater provisions
- F Treaties with water quality provisions
- G Treaties that delineate water allocations
- Bibliography
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Summary
THE VALUE OF WATER: AN OVERVIEW OF MAJOR ISSUES
Managing water conflicts ultimately concerns values. Values and perceptions toward how to use and prioritize water in various locations change over time as social demographics and needs change. Today's enhanced discussion of water as an economic good, among other characteristics, has brought more attention to how water services are priced and how markets might be a means to prioritize and/or reallocate water uses. Because such prioritization and reallocation decisions involve trade-offs among values, they are often at the heart of water conflicts. This appendix briefly describes various values associated with water uses and conflicts. It then provides studies on international water pricing in treaties.
THE DUBLIN STATEMENT AND UNITED NATIONS AGENDA 21
The Dublin Statement, issued from the International Conference of Water and the Environment (ICWE) held in Dublin, Ireland, in January 1992, was a primary catalyst of the debate over treatment of water as an economic good (ICWE, 1992). Resulting from the call from 500 participants from 100 nations for fundamental new approaches to the management of freshwater resources, the Dublin Statement included within it the principle that “water has an economic value in all its competing uses and should be recognized as an economic good” (ICWE, 1992, Guiding Principle No. 4). This was the first explicit recognition of water as an economic good, and this principle is often found quoted in literature that has ensued since its establishment.
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- Managing and Transforming Water Conflicts , pp. 249 - 265Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
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