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Transboundary
Freshwater Dispute Database | Publications
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Yoffe, Shira B., Greg Fiske, Mark Giordano, Meredith Giordano, Kelli Larson, Kerstin Stahl, and Aaron T. Wolf. 2004. Geography of international water conflict and cooperation: Data sets and applications. Water Resources Research, vol. 40, No. 5: 1-12 [PDF file]
ABSTRACT:
The Transboundary Freshwater Dispute Database provides a framework for
quantitative, global-scale explorations of the relationship between freshwater resources
and international cooperation and conflict. Projects were designed to test common
theories linking freshwater resources to cooperation and conflict, in particular within the
context of geography and environmental security. The projects, which follow in sequence,
consider three main hypotheses on the likelihood and intensity of water resource
disputes. To test these hypotheses, a unique set of tools was created that links
water-specific event data with a geographic information system (GIS) that meshes
biophysical, political, and socioeconomic data sets at the river basin and other scales.
There are three linked data sets: (1) an event data set documenting historical water
relations, including a methodology for identifying and classifying events by their intensity
of cooperation/conflict; (2) a GIS data set of countries and international basins, both
current and historical; and (3) a spatial data set of biophysical, socioeconomic, and
political variables, linked to the GIS. This paper describes the hypotheses, the above tools
created to test them, and a methodological framework for utilizing the linked event and
GIS data sets, providing three projects as examples: (1) indicators of international basins
at risk of political tensions, (2) relationships between internal and international
hydropolitics in three geographic regions, and (3) hydroclimatological variables and
international water relations.