Integrated Water Resources Management: Concept, Research and Implementation

Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: SpringerLink (Online service)
Other Authors: Borchardt, Dietrich. (Editor), Bogardi, Janos J. (Editor), Ibisch, Ralf B. (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2016.
Edition:1st ed. 2016.
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-25071-7
Table of Contents:
  • Part I Introduction
  • 1 Integrated Water Resources Management: Concept, Research and Implementation
  • Part II Water resources assessments
  • 2 Water management in a complex hydrological basin - Application of Water Evaluation and Planning Tool (WEAP) to the Lake Kinneret watershed, Israel
  • 3 Assessment of Anthropogenic Impact on the Environmental Flows of Semi-Arid Watersheds: TheCase Study of the Lower Jordan River
  • 4 New tools for coherent information base for IWRM in arid regions: the Upper Mega Aquifer System on the Arabian
  • 5 Multidisciplinary investigations of the transboundary Dead Sea basin and its water resources
  • 6 The impact of rainfall-runoff events on the water quality of the upper catchment of the Jordan River, Israel
  • 7 Input-output model-based water footprint indicators to support IWRM in the irrigated drylands of Uzbekistan, Central Asia
  • Part III Climate Change
  • 8 Climate Change information for IWRM
  • Part IV Water Governance.- 9 IWRM in Uzbekistan: A global concept with local consequences
  • 10 Water scarcity impacts and challenges of water governance in the Guanting Basin, North China. Evidence from interviews with local stakeholders
  • 11 Addressing Water Conflicts through Context-specific In stitutional Analysis: a Handbook for Research Projects and Programmes
  • Part V Public information and participation
  • 12 Participative scenario development as a method to integrate science and IWRM - Lessons learnt from a case study in the Jordan River region
  • 13 Benefits and Barriers of Participation: Experiences of Applied Research Projects in Integrated Water Resources
  • Part VI Capacity Development
  • 14 Capacity Development for Integrated Water Resources Management: Lessons learned from applied research projects
  • Part VII Water knowledge, information management and decision support
  • 15 A Water related Information System for the Sustainable Development of the Mekong Delta: Experiences of the German-Vietnamese WISDOM Project
  • 16 Analysing stakeholder driven scenarios with a transboundary water planning tool for IWRM in the Jordan River basin
  • 17 Decision Support in the context of IWRM: Lessons learnt from research projects in developing and emerging countries.- Part VIII Integrated land and water resources management
  • 18 The use of treated wastewater for irrigation as a component of Integrated Water Resources Management: Reducing environmental implications on soil and groundwater by evaluating site-specific soil suitabilities
  • 19 Agriculture in Mongolia under pressure of agronomic nutrient imbalances and food security demands: A case study of stakeholder participation for future nutrient and water resource management
  • 20 WebGIS-based approach to simulate water and solute fluxes in the Miyun basin in China
  • 21 Dynamic Land Use Change as Challenge for IWRM: a Case Study in Central Brazil
  • Part IX Regional case studies and pathways to sustainable water management
  •  22 Reconceptualising Water Management in Khorezm, Uzbekistan Recommendations towards IWRM
  • 23 Integrated Water Resource Management in Isfahan: The Zayandeh Rud Catchment
  • 24 Overall-effective measures for sustainable water resources management in the coastal area of Shandong Province, PR China
  • 25 Modular Concept for Municipal Water Management in the Kharaa River Basin, Mongolia
  • 26 From the Concept to the Tap - Integrated Water Resources Management in Northern Namibia
  • Part X Transboundary case studies
  • 27 Sustainable Water and Land Management under Global Change - The GLOWA Jordan River Project
  • 28 Challenges of implementing IWRM in the Lower Jordan Valley.