River Basin Organizations and the Sustainable
Governance
of Internationally Shared Rivers and Lakes
di Susanne Schmeier
This book focuses on River Basin Organizations as the
key institutions for managing internationally shared water resources. This
includes a comparative analysis of all River Basin Organizations worldwide and
three in-depth case studies from three different continents. The detailed case
studies are the Senegal (West Africa), Mekong (South-east Asia) and Danube
(Europe) rivers.
The book contributes to the academic debate on how
shared natural and environmental resources can be managed in a sustainable way
and which institutional and legal mechanisms actually matter for doing so. It
adopts the neo-institutionalist approach, according to which international
environmental institutions do make a difference. The analysis not only confirms
this argument for the specific case of shared water resources, but also refines
existing hypotheses on the influence of different independent variables, namely
the nature of the collective action problem, the constellation of actors and
the institutional design of an international environmental institution.
The work also contributes to the policy debate on how
to better govern internationally shared natural resources and the environment.
It provides policy makers with advice on which exogenous conditions to be aware
of when managing water resources they share with co-riparians and which
institutional design features and governance mechanisms to set up in order to
increase effectiveness in management.