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ID074823
Title ProperGlobal regime formation or complex institution building? The principled content of international river agreements
LanguageENG
AuthorConca, Ken ;  Wu, Fengshi ;  Mei, Ciqi
Publication2006.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper analyzes the principled content of 62 international river agreements for the period 1980-2000. We ask two questions: whether governments are converging on common principles for governing shared river basins and whether the effort to create a global normative framework for shared rivers has shaped the principled content of basin-level international accords. The data reveal a complex process of normative development. A few core principles emanating from global legal efforts have shown significant growth, diffusion and deepening at the basin-specific level. Others are common in basin agreements but show no diffusion or deepening. Still others are weakly represented in the data. If joint articulation of common principles is necessary for regime formation, then there is only weak evidence for a global rivers regime. But the data also reveal normative developments not captured by a regime-theoretic lens: a backlash reinforcing sovereign rights, the emergence of two seemingly conflicting clusters of principles, and an ambiguous relationship between some principles typically thought to be mutually reinforcing. The results show the need to treat principled content as an important dependent variable in the study of cooperation and to view institution building as a dynamic, multi-dimensional and multi-level process.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Studies Quarterly Vol. 50, No. 2; Jun 2006: p263-285
Journal SourceInternational Studies Quarterly Vol: 50 No 2
Key WordsInternational River Agreements ;  Regime Formation ;  International Accords