The Kura-Aras River Basin is the largest and most critical water resource in the South Caucasus. As the primary source of freshwater for Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan and a significant source for Turkey and Iran, the basin is at the center of a complex geopolitical region. The Kura-Aras has not been managed under a cooperative management treaty since the fall of the Soviet Union and remains one of the most significant watercourses ungoverned by a transboundary agreement. Tense relations between neighbors, as well as ambitious development plans and economic priorities, have pushed international cooperation over the basin to the fringes of the region's agenda. In this chapter, the Kura-Aras River Basin is examined in order to identify factors inhibiting, and opportunities to promote, cooperation. While a multilateral, basin-wide treaty appears unrealistic given extreme levels of diplomatic discord, opportunities exist to move toward a cooperative management framework through bilateral agreements.
CITATION STYLE
Stoa, R. B. (2015). Shared waters of the south caucasus: Lessons for treaty formation and development. In Sustainability of Integrated Water Resources Management: Water Governance, Climate and Ecohydrology (pp. 335–344). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-12194-9_18
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.