Integrated management of land and water resources based on a collective approach to fragmented international conventions.
Open Access
- 5 November 2003
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 358 (1440) , 2051-2062
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2003.1410
Abstract
Interlinked crises of land degradation, food security, ecosystem decline, water quality and water flow depletion stand in the way of poverty reduction and sustainable development. These crises are made worse by increased fluctuations in climatic regimes. Single–purpose international conventions address these crises in a piecemeal, sectoral fashion and may not meet their objectives without greater attention to policy, legal, and institutional reforms related to: (i) balancing competing uses of land and water resources within hydrologic units; (ii) adopting integrated approaches to management; and (iii) establishing effective governance institutions for adaptive management within transboundary basins. This paper describes this global challenge and argues that peace, stability and security are all at stake when integrated approaches are not used. The paper presents encouraging results from a decade of transboundary water projects supported by the Global Environment Facility in developing countries that test practical applications of processes for facilitating reforms related to land and water that are underpinned by science–based approaches. Case studies of using these participative processes are described that collectively assist in the transition to integrated management. A new imperative for incorporatiing interlinkages among food, water, and environment security at the basin level is identified.Keywords
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