Graduation Year

2008

Document Type

Thesis

Degree

M.S.

Degree Granting Department

Geography

Major Professor

Mark Amen, Ph.D.

Committee Member

Robert Brinkman, Ph.D.

Committee Member

Fenda Akiwumi, Ph.D.

Keywords

Egypt, Ethiopia, Sudan, Cooperation, Neo-functionalism

Abstract

The management of international waterways presents riparian nations with a challenging set of political, economic, environmental, and geographic difficulties. Historically, the Nile Basin has exemplified many of these problems as witnessed by inter-basin conflict, devastating floods, crippling drought, and unstable political and economic development. Despite their tumultuous past the ten riparian nations of the Nile Basin established a supranational water management institution in 1999, the Nile Basin Initiative (NBI), in order to develop collective solutions to their common water related problems. However, serious challenges to the cooperative process threaten to derail the NBI and enflame underlying causes of conflict. This thesis seeks to determine how the NBI has affected water related decision making in the Nile Basin. This will be achieved by examining patterns of decision-making before and after the establishment of the NBI. Specifically, the impact of the NBI will be tested by examining patterns of decision-making within three measures of conflict, namely the allocation of water resources, the sharing of technical data and expertise, and the financing of water related projects and programs.

Share

COinS