Bjørn-Oliver Magsig– Routledge, 2015
The world’s freshwater supplies are increasingly
threatened by rapidly increasing demand and the impacts of global climate
change, but current approaches to transboundary water management are
unsustainable and may threaten future global stability and international
security. The absence of law in attempts to address this issue highlights the
necessity for further understanding from the legal perspective.
This book provides a fresh conceptualisation of water
security, developing an operational methodology for identifying the four core
elements of water security which must be addressed by international law:
availability; access; adaptability; and ambit. The analysis of the legal
framework of transboundary freshwater management based on this contemporary
understanding of water security reveals the challenges and shortcomings of the
current legal regime. In order to address these shortcomings, the present
mindset of prevailing rigidity and state-centrism is challenged by examining
how international legal instruments could be crafted to advance a more flexible
and common approach towards transboundary water interaction.
The concept of considering water security as a matter
of ‘regional common concern’ is introduced to help international law play a
more prominent role in addressing the challenges of global water insecurity.
Ways for implementing such an approach are proposed and analysed by looking at
international hydropolitics in Himalayan Asia. The book analyses transboundary
water interaction as a ‘case study’ for advancing public international law in
order to fulfil its responsibility of promoting international peace and
security.