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The effectiveness of treaty design in addressing water disputes

We examine the design features of treaties governing international rivers and empirically test their effectiveness in managing water disputes. We expect peaceful conflict management to be more successful and militarized conflict to be less likely in dyadic river claims when riparians share membershi...

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Published in:Journal of peace research 2015-03, Vol.52 (2), p.187-200
Main Authors: Mitchell, Sara McLaughlin, Zawahri, Neda A
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Language:English
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description We examine the design features of treaties governing international rivers and empirically test their effectiveness in managing water disputes. We expect peaceful conflict management to be more successful and militarized conflict to be less likely in dyadic river claims when riparians share membership in treaties with mechanisms for river basin organizations, information exchange, monitoring, enforcement, and conflict resolution. To test our expectation we analyze a set of diplomatic disagreements over cross-border rivers coded by the Issue Correlates of War project. We combine this database with treaty content data from the Transboundary Freshwater Dispute Database. Empirical analyses suggest that information exchange and enforcement provisions in river treaties are most effective for preventing militarization of river claims and increase the chances that negotiations over river claims successfully resolve the issues at stake. Enforcement provisions also promote third-party dispute settlement attempts and increase the likelihood of compliance with agreements reached. States that share membership in river basin organizations are more likely to experience militarized disputes and less likely to be amenable to third-party dispute settlement. However, the latter states are more likely to reach agreements in peaceful negotiations over their river claims. These findings demonstrate that institutional design influences riparian states' ability to address water disputes.
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection; SAGE:Jisc Collections:SAGE Journals Read and Publish 2023-2024:2025 extension (reading list); PAIS Index; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Humanities Index
subjects Armed conflict
Compliance
Conflict management
Conflict resolution
Disputes
Negotiations
Peace studies
Treaties
Water distribution
Water resources
title The effectiveness of treaty design in addressing water disputes
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