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International Watercourses Law in the Nile River Basin - Three States at a Crossroads (Paperback)
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International Watercourses Law in the Nile River Basin - Three States at a Crossroads (Paperback)
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The Nile River and its basin extend over a distinctive geophysical
cord connecting eleven sovereign states from Egypt to Tanzania,
which are home to an estimated population of 422.2 million people.
The Nile is an essential source of water for domestic, industrial
and agricultural uses throughout the basin, yet for more than a
century it has been at the centre of continuous and conflicting
claims and counter-claims to rights of utilization of the resource.
In this book the author examines the multifaceted legal regulation
of the Nile. He re-constructs the legal and historical origin and
functioning of the British Nile policies in Ethiopia by examining
the composition of the Anglo-Ethiopian Treaty of 1902, and analyses
its ramifications on contemporary riparian discourse involving
Ethiopia and Sudan. The book also reflects on two fairly
established legal idioms - the natural and historical rights
expressions - which constitute central pillars of the claims of
downstream rights in the Nile basin; the origin, essence and legal
authority of the notions has been assessed on the basis of the
normative dictates of contemporary international watercourses law.
Likewise, the book examines the non-treaty based claims of rights
of the basin states to the Nile waters, setting out what the
equitable uses principle entails as a means of reconciling
competing riparian interests, and most importantly, how its
functioning affects contemporary legal settings. The author then
presents the concentrated diplomatic movements of the basin states
in negotiations on the Transitional Institutional Mechanism of the
Nile Basin Initiative (NBI) - pursued since the 1990's, and
explains why the substance of water use rights still continued to
be perceived diversely among basin states. Finally, the specific
legal impediments that held back progress in negotiations on the
Nile Basin Cooperative Framework are presented in context.
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