Demand, Supply, and Restraint: Determinants of Domestic Water Conflict and Cooperation
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
Böhmelt, Tobias; Thomas Bernauer; Halvard Buhaug; Nils Petter Gleditsch; Theresa Tribaldos & Gerdis Wischnath (2014) Demand, Supply, and Restraint: Determinants of Domestic Water Conflict and Cooperation, Global Environmental Change 29: 337–348.
This
article focuses on one of the most likely empirical manifestations of the “environment-
conflict” claim by examining how demand for and supply of water may lead to
domestic water conflict. It also studies what factors may reduce the risk of
conflict and, hence, induce cooperation. To this end, the article advances
several theory-based arguments about the determinants of water conflict and
cooperation, and then analyzes time-series cross-section data for 35
Mediterranean, Middle Eastern, and Sahel countries between 1997 and 2009. The
empirical results show that demand-side drivers, such as population pressure,
agricultural productivity, and economic development are likely to have a
stronger impact on water conflict risk than supply-side factors, represented by
climate variability. The analysis also reveals that violent water conflicts are
extremely rare, and that factors conducive to restraint, such as stable
political conditions, may stimulate cooperation. Overall, these results suggest that the joint analysis of demand, supply, and restraint improves our
ability to account for domestic water-related conflict and cooperation.
Read the article here (Open Access)