ABSTRACT

Governance of global water resources presents one of the most confounding challenges in contemporary natural resource governance. With considerable government, citizen and financial donor attention devoted to a range of international, transnational and domestic laws and policies aimed at protecting, managing and sustainably using fresh and coastal marine water resources, this book proposes that sustainable water outcomes require a ‘trans-jurisdictional’ approach to water governance.

Focusing on the concept of trans-jurisdictional water governance the book diagnoses barriers and identifies pathways to coherent and coordinated institutional arrangements between and across different bodies of laws at local, national, regional and international levels. It includes case studies from the European Union, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, the United States and Southeast Asia. Leading specialists offer insights into the pretence and the promise of trans-jurisdictional water governance and provide readers, including students, practitioners, policy-makers and academics, with a basis for better analysing, articulating and synthesising standards of good trans-jurisdictional water governance both in theory and in practice.

part |80 pages

Trans-jurisdictional water law governance

part |93 pages

Trans-jurisdictional water law and governance

chapter |19 pages

Intra-national rivalries

A submerged aspect of trans-boundary water governance

chapter |18 pages

Defragging

Overcoming fragmentation in United States water governance

chapter |19 pages

Beyond the traditional governance of trans-jurisdictional groundwater

Unconventional approaches to cross-boundary aquifer management in the United States

chapter |18 pages

Muddied water

(Un)cooperative governance and water management in South Africa

chapter |17 pages

The flow of laws

The trans-jurisdictional laws of the longest river in Aotearoa New Zealand

part |108 pages

Emerging challenges in trans-jurisdictional water law and governance