Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 306 OF 315

Main Title Water Institutions: Policies, Performance and Prospects [electronic resource] /
Type EBOOK
Author Gopalakrishnan, Chennat.
Other Authors
Author Title of a Work
Biswas, Asit K.
Tortajada, Cecilia.
Publisher Springer Berlin Heidelberg,
Year Published 2005
Call Number GB1001-1199.8
ISBN 9783540265672
Subjects Hydraulic engineering ; Environmental law ; Environmental pollution ; Economic policy ; Environmental economics ; Political science
Internet Access
Description Access URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/b137821
Collation XIII, 210 p. online resource.
Notes
Due to license restrictions, this resource is available to EPA employees and authorized contractors only
Contents Notes
Water Allocation and Management in Hawaii: A Case of Institutional Entropy -- Institutions for Resources Management: A Case Study from Sri Lanka -- Water Institutions in India: Structure, Performance, and Change -- Uphill Flow of Reform in China's Irrigation Districts -- Institutions for Water Management in Mexico -- Water Institutions in the Middle East -- Institutions in South African International River Basins -- Property Rights, Water Rights and the Changing Scene in Western Water -- Finding a Modern Role for the Prior Appropriation Doctrine in the American West. It is being increasingly realised that water is likely to be one of the most critical resource issues for the first half of the twenty-first century. Accelerating demand for water for various uses and user groups and ineffective measures to address - ter quality decline from point and non-point sources of pollution, have made water management more complex and difficult than ever before in human history. All the current trends indicate that water management will become even more c- plex in the future because of society's higher demands for good quality water, and new and emerging impacts on the water sector due to the forces of globalisation. These include the liberalisation of trade in agricultural and manufactured products, information and communication revolution, and technological developments in - eas traditionally not considered to be water-oriented, like biotechnology. Impacts of these new and emerging forces on the water sector are still not fully understood or appreciated at present, but they are likely to change water use practices d- matically in many countries of the world during the coming decades.