Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-ttngx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-07T17:00:25.705Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Burning Waters: The Hydropolitics of the Euphrates and Tigris

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 July 2015

Gün Kut*
Affiliation:
Boğaziçi University, Department of Political Science and International Relations.

Extract

The world's natural freshwater resources available for human use are more scarce than is generally assumed. This statement has already become a cliche, yet the truth it reveals is getting more apparent every day, just as is the case with other global problems which require solutions above and beyond the parochial and short term interests of individual nation states. Water scarcity has two important aspects, both with political connotations at different levels, with worldwide maldistribution of economic and natural resources being at the core of the problem.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © New Perspectives on Turkey 1993

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Beaumont, Peter. 1992. “Water - A Resource Under Pressure”, in Nonneman, Gerd. (ed.) The Middle East and Europe; An Integrated Communities Approach. London: Federal Trust for Education and Research.Google Scholar
Bağış, A.İhsan. 1989. G.A.P. Southeastern Anatolia Project; The Cradle of Civilization Regenerated. Istanbul:Interbank.Google Scholar
Beschorner, , Natasha. 1992. Water and Instability in the Middle East. London: Adelphi Paper 273.Google Scholar
Chalabi, Hassan. 1992. “Turkey and the River Euphrates: The Context Within International Law,” paper presented to the Conference on Water in the Middle East. London, SOAS, 19-20 November.Google Scholar
Dellapenna, Joseph W. 1992. “Building International Water Management Institutions: The Role of Treaties and Other Legal Arrangements”, paper presented to the Conference on Water in the Middle East. London, SOAS, 19-20 November.Google Scholar
El Mor, Awad M.The View Downstream: Acquired Rights and the Need for their Protection”, paper presented to the Conference on Water in the Middle East. London, SOAS, 19-20 November.Google Scholar
Government of Iraq, Ministry of Development. 1953. The Gharraf Project.Google Scholar
Gruen, George. 1992. The Water Crisis: The Next Middle East Conflict? (revised edition). Los Angeles: The Simon Wiesenthal Center.Google Scholar
Gruen, George. 1993. “Turkey's Potential Contribution to Arab-Israel Peace”, Paper presented to the Ninth Annual Meeting of Association for Israel Studies. Emory University, Atlanta, May 16-17.Google Scholar
Khalili, Sara. 1993. “The Seven Wonders of the Modern World,” Infrastructure Finance, Summer.Google Scholar
Kolars, John F. and Mitchell, William A.. 1991. The Euphrates River and The Southeast Anatolia Development Project. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.Google Scholar
Krishna, Raj. 1992. “International Watercourses: World Bank Experience and Policy”, paper presented to the Conference on Water in the Middle East. London, SOAS, 19-20 November.Google Scholar
Naff, Thomas and Matson, Ruth. 1984. Water in the Middle East; Conflict or Cooperation? Boulder and London: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Nonneman, Gerd. 1992. The Middle East and Europe; An Integrated Communities Approach. London: Federal Trust for Education and Research.Google Scholar
Parker, Mushtak. 1991. “Rumbles in the Peace Pipeline”, South, August.Google Scholar
Robins, Philip. 1991. Turkey and the Middle East. London: Pinter Publishers.Google Scholar
Springborg, Robert. “Baathism in Practice: Agriculture, Politics, and Political Culture in Syria and Iraq”, Middle Eastern Studies, v.17, (Apr.) 1981.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bakanlığı, T.C. Enerji ve Tabii Kaynaklar. 1966. Aşağı Fırat Projesi İstikşaf Raporu. Ankara: DSI.Google Scholar