One of the major problems facing practitioners and scientists
working with water management is how to integrate knowledge and
experiences from scientific, policy and stakeholder perspectives.
In this book this science-policy-stakeholder interface (SPSI) is
examined both analytically and through the description of practical
experiences from river basins in Europe, India and South-East Asia.
These include the Tungabhadra (India), Sesan (Vietnam/Cambodia),
Tagus (Spain/Portugal) and Glomma (Norway), which particularly
highlight issues associated with pollution, severely altered river
flows and transboundary conflicts.
Following two chapters which lay the framework for the book the
authors describe how SPSI was managed in the case study basins and
how stakeholder participation and scenarios were used to integrate
different perspectives, and to facilitate the communication of
different forms of knowledge. Four important aspects of water
management and SPSI are then discussed; these are water pollution,
land and water interaction, environmental flow and transboundary
water regimes. Short descriptions of the case study rivers are
provided together with analyses of how SPSI was managed in water
management in these basins and policy recommendations for the
basins.
The book concludes by providing a series of recommendations for
improving the science-policy-stakeholder interface in water
management. It represents a major step forward in our understanding
of how to implement integrated water resources management.
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