Record Details

Climate change and the institutional resilience of international river basins

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Climate change and the institutional resilience of international river basins
Names De Stefano, Lucia (creator)
Duncan, James (creator)
Dinar, Shlomi (creator)
Stahl, Kerstin (creator)
Strzepek, Kenneth M. (creator)
Wolf, Aaron T. (creator)
Date Issued 2012-01 (iso8601)
Note This is the author's peer-reviewed Uncorrected Proofs manuscript and is copyrighted by The Author(s), as accepted by the publisher. The final article is published by SAGE Publications and can be found at: http://jpr.sagepub.com/.
Abstract In the existing 276 international river basins, the increase in water variability projected by most climate change scenarios
may present serious challenges to riparian states.This research maps the institutional resilience to water variability in transboundary
basins and combines it with both historic and projected variability regimes, with the objective of identifying
areas at potential risk of future hydropolitical tension. To do so, it combs existing international treaties for sources of institutional
resilience and considers the coefficient of variation of runoff as a measure of past and future water variability. The
study finds significant gaps in both the number of people and area covered by institutional stipulations to deal with variability
in South America and Asia. At present, high potential risk for hydropolitical tensions associated with water variability
is identified in 24 transboundary basins and seems to be concentrated mainly in northern and sub-Saharan Africa.
By 2050, areas at greatest potential risk are more spatially dispersed and can be found in 61 international basins, and some
of the potentially large impacts of climate change are projected to occur away from those areas currently under scrutiny.
Understanding when and where to target capacity-building in transboundary river basins for greater resilience to change is
critical. This study represents a step toward facilitating these efforts and informing further qualitative and quantitative
research into the relationship between climate change, hydrological variability regimes, and institutional capacity for
accommodating variability.
Genre Article
Topic climate change
Identifier De Stefano, L., Duncan, J., Dinar, S., Stahl, K., Strzepek, K., & Wolf, A. (2012). Climate change and the institutional resilience of international river basins. JOURNAL OF PEACE RESEARCH, 49(1), 193-209. doi: 10.1177/0022343311427416

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