The
Extraterritorial Application of the Human Right to Water in Africa
Takele Soboka
Bulto, Cambridge University Press 2014
International
human rights law has only recently concerned itself with water. Instead, international
water law has regulated the use of shared rivers, and only states qua states
could claim rights and bear duties towards each other. International human
rights law has focused on its principal mission of taming the powers of a state
acting territorially. Takele Soboka Bulto challenges the established analytic
boundaries of international water law and international human rights law. By
demonstrating the potential complementarity between the two legal regimes and
the ensuing utility of regime coordination for the establishment of the human
right to water and its extraterritorial application, he also shows that human
rights law and the international law of watercourses can apply in tandem with
the purpose of protecting non-national non-residents in Africa and beyond.