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Legislation & regulation
A Case Study of the Mekong Lowlands (pdf 249kb)
In river basins around the world, formal agreements based on international watercourse law are seen as important mechanisms for promoting sustainability and cooperation.
While such agreements have been effective in avoiding conflict between states in the short-term, success at the international scale can, paradoxically, undermine the foundations of ecological and social sustainability at the local scale, thereby threatening long-term stability.
To investigate reasons for this problematic, cross-scale institutional interplay, the paper draws on a case study from the Mekong lowlands, a common pool resource upon which millions of people depend for their livelihoods.
- Resource link:
http://www.wider.unu.edu/ publications/rps/rps2005/ rp2005-20.pdf - Published: April, 2005
- Source: United Nations University - WIDER (http://www.wider.unu.edu)
- Added to ADG on: 18 May 2005 , contributed by: CSIRO
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