In 2005-06, the CSIR contributed to a study led by Phillips Robinson and Associates
of Namibia, on behalf of the Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs1. The investigation addressed cooperation and conflict in trans-boundary basins, and also the potential for benefit-sharing (as opposed to the volumetric allocation of trans-boundary waters). Three case studies were included: the Jordan River; the Kagera River, extending to the Nile as a whole; and the Mekong River
Reference:
Turton, A. 2007. Focus on CSIR research in water resources: Inter-SEDE: a new tool for interrogating transboundary basins. 2007 Stockholm water week 13-17 August 2007, pp 1
Turton, A. (2007). Focus on CSIR research in water resources: Inter-SEDE: a new tool for interrogating transboundary basins. CSIR Natural Resources and the Environment 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/1137
Turton, A. "Focus on CSIR research in water resources: Inter-SEDE: a new tool for interrogating transboundary basins." (2007): http://hdl.handle.net/10204/1137
Turton A, Focus on CSIR research in water resources: Inter-SEDE: a new tool for interrogating transboundary basins; CSIR Natural Resources and the Environment 2007; 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/1137 .