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Balancing development and environmental conservation and protection of the water resource base – The “greening” of water laws









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    Book (series)
    Legal and Institutional Aspects of Urban, Peri-Urban Forestry and Greening: a Working Paper for Discussion 2005
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    This paper gives a brief overview of the existing UPFG laws and regulations and points out the issues that legislative bodies may have to consider with regard to UPFG. The objective of the paper is to give an overriding analysis of the relevant issues that need to be considered in order to analyze the legal and institutional aspects of UPFG. Taking UPFG into consideration, the legislation of several countries was assessed to illustrate the broad framework, the gaps, the overlaps and the positive examples of laws and regulations. This study is not based on a thorough analysis; its objective is solely to give an overview of the legal and institutional instruments regulating this matter and to disclose the specific institutional and legal issues affecting UPFG. The paper only covers the most relevant aspects related to UPFG.
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    Customary water rights and contemporary water legislation: mapping out the interface 2008
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    Many questions about customary legal developments go unexplained if no recourse is made to the connection between legal and economic systems. Since time immemorial they interact, justify and fertilise each other. Most of all, if we believe that customary laws and justice develop and transform themselves, the question is: how much does economic development influence legal institutions and rules? An historical, inter-sectoral juridical (and economic) approach is necessary to define differences bet ween customary and modern systems, because these systems were born as a result of specific historical circumstances and will eventually die out or be replaced. A historical and anthropological dimension has been incorporated in this paper, as a sound understanding of current customary laws and practice is incomplete without reference to colonial and pre-colonial water use and management practices.
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    Water as a Vehicle for Inter-state Cooperation: A Legal Perspective 2003
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    In the first part of this paper the role of the core principles in three different scenarios will be discussed. The first is a setting where a shared watercourse, but no specific treaty exists; the second, where a treaty is in the process of being negotiated; and the third where an agreement over the shared resource is in force. The second par t of the paper will look in detail at the normative content of each principle, its reflection in specific watercourse agreements and its imple mentation by joint bodies. Both parts will show that the contribution of the law is neither simply formal, adding a legal varnish to a negotiated deal, nor that it provides just “bindingness” at the end of an exclusively politic al process. On the contrary, the law imposes upon states material and procedural right s and duties that limit states’ unfetter ed sovereignty to do as they alone wish with the part of an international watercourse that falls with in their territory. International water law is designed in a way as to lead to mutually acceptable solutions in situations of conflicting interests and even to bring about cooperation in a number of ways.

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