Title of article :
The benefit-sharing principle: Implementing sovereignty bargains on water
Author/Authors :
Undala Alam، نويسنده , , Ousmane Dione، نويسنده , , Paul Jeffrey، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
11
From page :
90
To page :
100
Abstract :
A global water crisis is emerging that may challenge statesʹ existing and future water availability. With countries already heavily reliant on international rivers, the issue of managing water scarcity in these basins is mounting. An already complex issue due to climatic change and the politics of access, the management of water resources is complicated further by sovereignty. In a context shaped by political boundaries and a concomitant territorial exclusivity, nation-states seek to guarantee their societiesʹ water by exerting control through physical and institutional infrastructure. Yet, the basinʹs hydrological interdependency implies co-riparian countries remain vulnerable to each otherʹs use of the shared river, suggesting ecological rather than just political limits to sovereignty. The continued vulnerability, as envisaged within the greening of sovereignty, suggests international cooperation is necessary. Explained as sovereignty bargains, in which states trade reduced autonomy for future benefits, international cooperation is, we suggest, bi-directional and can stem from or create international institutions. We examine an instance of international cooperation that exemplifies an alternative approach to international river management. The benefit-sharing principle focuses on allocating the outputs from water use, rather than the water itself; and was used by the Senegal basin riparians to access key services such as electricity despite a context of poverty, climatic change and intra-basin politics. What emerges is a strong narrative of cooperation sustained, over decades, by the statesʹ willingness to engage in sovereignty bargains.
Keywords :
Senegal river , Sovereignty bargains , Benefit-sharing , water , international cooperation , OMVS
Journal title :
Political Geography
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Political Geography
Record number :
1292468
Link To Document :
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