Transboundary water management who does what, where?
Kyungmee Kim, Karin Glaumann (2011) The primary objetives of the transboundary water management are: maximum utilisation of the common good; conflict prevention and maintaining ecological
Kyungmee Kim, Karin Glaumann (2011) The primary objetives of the transboundary water management are: maximum utilisation of the common good; conflict prevention and maintaining ecological
Major, D.C., Omojola, A., Dettinger, M.D., Hanson, R.T., Sanchez-Rodriguez, R., 2011 Climate Change and Cities, Cynthia Rosenzweig, William D. Solecki, Stephen A. Hammer, and Shagun
Anna Szynkiewicza,b, James C. Witcherc, Magdalena Modelskad, David M. Borrokb, Lisa M. Pratt The sources of SO4along a ~550 km stretch of the Rio Grande
Environmental issues and the management of natural resources have become a significant element of the binational relationship between Mexico and the United States during the
Christopher J. Eastoea, William R. Hutchisonb, Barry J. Hibbsc, John Hawleyd, James F. Hogan Detailed sets of tracer data (isotopes, salinity) and the results of
Margaret Wilder, Christopher A. Scott, Nicola ́s Pineda Pablos, Robert G. Varady, Gregg M. Garfin, and Jamie McEvoy The spatial and human dimensions of climate change
Anita Milman, Christopher A Scott As resilience on groundwater increases, the impact of groundwater-intensive use in internationally shared aquifers threatens not only to create negative
Valdes, J.B., and Maddock, T., III, 2010, Conjunctive water management in the US Southwest, in Schneier-Madanes, G., and Courel, M.-F., eds., Water and sustainability in
WRI-2009
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