Quantity and Qualities: The Development and Extent of Transboundary Water Law in Africa

This article documents and analyzes the largest collection of transboundary water agreements related to Africa. Collection contents are categorized to provide insights into the evolution and geography of transboundary water law in Africa, and – when possible - to situate that law within a global context. The findings reveal that both historic and geographic factors have influenced African agreements. Historically, there is a trend toward increasing robustness generally consistent with global trends. Geographically, agreements vary by the degree and type of water scarcity in associated basins. The findings help answer questions related to current transboundary water management in Africa and provide guidanceforfuture institutional development.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lautze, Jonathan, Giordano, Mark
Format: Image biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2006-06
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/21672
http://lawlibrary.unm.edu/nrj/45/4/08_lautze_africa.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:This article documents and analyzes the largest collection of transboundary water agreements related to Africa. Collection contents are categorized to provide insights into the evolution and geography of transboundary water law in Africa, and – when possible - to situate that law within a global context. The findings reveal that both historic and geographic factors have influenced African agreements. Historically, there is a trend toward increasing robustness generally consistent with global trends. Geographically, agreements vary by the degree and type of water scarcity in associated basins. The findings help answer questions related to current transboundary water management in Africa and provide guidanceforfuture institutional development.