India and Nepal not only share common borders and cultures, but also share precious freshwater sources, i.e., rivers. Rivers have been discussed often in the political corridors because they cross international borders, which transform water reserves into a competitive resource and lead to hydropolitical dynamics between riparian countries. Nepal and India are two of the major riparian nations that share the mighty and complex Ganges Basin. The objective here was to study the more-than-a-century-old hydro-diplomacy between India and Nepal, passing through tumultuous political scenarios to understand how water relations have been shaped and reshaped with time. For this, a database of historical individual events/actions of water cooperation and conflict from 1874 to 2014 was compiled. These events/actions were ranked by intensity, using precise definitions of conflict and cooperation as suggested by the Transboundary Freshwater Dispute Database under the Basins at Risk project formulated at Oregon State University. Statistical analyses indicated cooperative events greatly outnumbered conflictive events. Out of 351 events, only 4% were conflictive, 92% were cooperative, and the remaining 4% were neutral. The study revealed an abundance of cooperative events; however, when seen through the lens of conflict-cooperation levels, the findings indicated a moderately positive cooperation, without much concrete action.
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Research Article|
May 20 2017
Hydropolitics and hydropolitical dynamics between India and Nepal: an event-based study
Subash P. Rai;
Subash P. Rai
*
aDepartment of Water Resources Development and Management, IIT Roorkee, Roorkee 247667, India
*Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected]
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Aaron T. Wolf;
Aaron T. Wolf
bCollege of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, USA
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Nayan Sharma
Nayan Sharma
aDepartment of Water Resources Development and Management, IIT Roorkee, Roorkee 247667, India
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Water Policy (2017) 19 (5): 791–819.
Article history
Received:
May 24 2016
Accepted:
March 24 2017
Citation
Subash P. Rai, Aaron T. Wolf, Nayan Sharma; Hydropolitics and hydropolitical dynamics between India and Nepal: an event-based study. Water Policy 1 October 2017; 19 (5): 791–819. doi: https://doi.org/10.2166/wp.2017.063
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