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ID180681
Title ProperContestation and collaboration for water resources
Other Title Informationcomparing the emerging regional water governance of the Aral Sea, Irtysh River, and Mekong River
LanguageENG
AuthorPark, Jeongwon Bourdais ;  Adibayeva, Aigul ;  Saari, Danial
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper enquires into how effectively “regional transboundary water governance” functions in resolving ecological problems associated with shared water resources. It compares three cases in Asia—the Irtysh River, Aral Sea, and Mekong River basin. Previous scholarly work on the hydro-politics of these three cases within social science disciplines, especially political science and international relations, focuses heavily on the dimension of “hegemonic power disparity between state actors” (from the weaker parties’ points of view) and/or the “economic or strategic benefits of development either defending or criticizing” (from the more powerful—often the polluters’—point of view). To contribute to existing research, this paper intends to enlarge the analytical scope and use the formation of regional environmental governance to grasp a broader picture of the complexity and interconnectivity of ecological issues, regional history, and politics. For analysis, we investigated the multilevel gaps in environmental communication at three different levels, exploring both the conflictual and cooperative relationships amongst all actors involved, namely (a) state-to-state relations: hydro-hegemonism due to the power disparity in historical and political contexts; (b) society level: authoritarian environmentalism between politics and citizens; and (c) global inter-connectivity or distance from (or the absence of) the application of international norms. We argue that all three cases, albeit at various degrees, equally exhibit the potential to fill the multidimensional gaps to ensure more functional, effective, and equitable regional hydro-governance.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Asian and African Studies Vol. 56, No.6; Sep 2021: p.1121–1143
Journal SourceJournal of Asian and African Studies 2021-09 56, 6
Key WordsAral Sea ;  Irtysh River ;  Mekong River Basin ;  Regional Water Governance ;  Transboundary Water Resources