Éditeur : Springer | Date & Lieu : 2011, Berlin |
Préface : | Pages : 408 |
Traduction : | ISBN : 978-3-642-19635-5 |
Langue : Anglais | Format : 155x235 mm |
Code FIKP : Liv. En. | Thème : Général |
Présentation
|
Table des Matières | Introduction | Identité | ||
Turkey’s Water Policy |
About the Editors Aysegul Kibaroglu is professor and faculty member in the International Relations Department at Okan University in Istanbul Turkey. Previously she was a faculty member and the Vice Chair in the Department of International Relations at the Middle East Technical University in Ankara. Dr. Kibaroglu spent a post-doctoral fellowship in the International Water Law Research Institute at the University of Dundee, Scotland. Her areas of research include: transboundary water politics; international law; political geography; environmental security and Turkish water policy. Prof. Dr. Kibaroglu has published extensively on the politics of water resources with an emphasis on the Euphrates Tigris river basin including a book volume entitled Building a Regime for the Waters of the Euphrates-Tigris River Basin by the Kluwer Law International (2002). She has also worked as Advisor to the President of the Southeastern Anatolia Project Regional Development Administration from 2001 to 2003. Waltina Scheumann holds her Master in political science and a Ph.D. in engineering. She has been a faculty member at the Chair in Environmental and Land Economics, Technical University Berlin. Dr Scheumann later worked as a senior researcher at the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ), Leipzig, and is presently working at the Deutsches Institut fu¨ r Entwicklungspolitik, DIE, Bonn. Dr. Scheumann’s work on water-related topics includes cooperation on transboundary waters, water governance issues in irrigated agriculture including drainage and combating salinization as well as the implementation of international standards for sustainable dam development in emerging economies (Brazil, China, India, Turkey) and in developing countries. Annika Kramer holds a degree in environmental engineering from the Technical University Berlin with a specialisation in water management and international environmental politics. Her work on topics related to water management over the last ten years includes research on cooperation potentials as well as legal and institutional frameworks for transboundary basin management, mainly in the Middle East and southern Africa. Annika is currently working as a Senior Project Manager with adelphi and preparing her Ph.D. on global evolution and diffusion of IWRM norms (University of Osnabru¨ck). Acknowledgments Every book is a curious journey and an adventure. This one was definitely no exception. During the weeks-long editing process in Bonn and Ankara, there were times when we, the editors, were contented with the outcome of our efforts by seeing how they contributed to the individual chapters to reflect what we really had in mind. There were also times when we spent laborious hours and days with a view to clarifying some of the complex issues in the manuscripts for the ease of understanding by our readers. All in all, our lengthy discussions over wide-ranging issues concerning water policy in Turkey were among the most instructive as well as productive times of our academic life. Trying to understand the complexities and peculiarities in the water policy discourse and the practice in Turkey, was a profound and lively learning process for all of us where we could draw from the many years of experience and knowledge we had gained through field studies, consultations and scholarships in Turkey and elsewhere. We realized that these were the moments when we dedicated ourselves truly to the editing process both as insiders and also as outsiders benefiting from our friendship, yet reflecting our objectivity to the work at hand as well. In realizing this edited volume, we were supported both financially and logistically by our own respective institutions, namely the Middle East Technical University (METU), Ankara, the German Development Institute (DIE, Deutsches Institut fuer Entwicklungspolitik), Bonn, and adelphi, Berlin. Hence, we would like to acknowledge their support as well as the research funding provided by the German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety, which enabled us to draft Part II of this book concerning the analyses particularly of cooperation on transboundary rivers. We would also like to thank those experts and scholars in Turkish water policy circles for sharing their invaluable insights with us throughout the entire working process. Many thanks to Janet Sterritt-Brunner for the language editing as well as to Alina Schellig for preparing maps and up-dating others for Part II of this book. And, last but not least we would like to thank our families for their continuous support and patience all through the research and writing process. Aysegul Kibaroglu, Waltina Scheumann, Annika Kramer |