Hydro-hegemony – a framework for analysis of trans-boundary water conflicts
University of London · King's College London · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The increasing structural and physical scarcity of water across the globe calls for a deeper understanding of trans-boundary water conflicts. Conventional analysis tends to downplay the role that power asymmetry plays in creating and maintaining situations of water conflict that fall short of the violent form of war and to treat as unproblematic situations of cooperation occurring in an asymmetrical context. The conceptual Framework of Hydro-Hegemony presented herein attempts to give these two features – power and varying intensities of conflict – their respective place in the perennial and deeply political question: who gets how much water, how and why? Hydro-hegemony is hegemony at the river basin level,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 44.74
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 60
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Hegemony
- Context (archaeology)
- Politics
- Power (physics)
- Political economy
- Resource (disambiguation)
- International relations
- Political science
- Clean water and sanitation