Full Description
This collection critically engages the resource use nexus. Clearly, a nexus-approach to resource policy, planning and practice is essential if sustainable development goals are to be met. In particular, in an era of climate change, an integrated approach to water, energy and agriculture is imperative. Agriculture accounts for 70% of global water withdrawals, food production accounts for 30% of global energy use and a rising global population requires more of everything. As shown in this collection, scholars of resource development, governance and management are 'nexus sensitive', utilizing a sort of 'nexus sensibility' in their work as it focuses on the needs of people particularly, but not only, in the global South. Importantly, a nexus-approach presents academics and practitioners with a discursive space in which to shape policy through research, to deepen and improve understandings of the interconnections and impacts of particular types of resource use, and to critically reflecton actions taken in the name of the 'nexus'.
Contents
Chapter 1. Perspectives on the Nexus: Water, Energy and Food Security in an Era of Climate Change.- Chapter 2. Water, Energy and Food: The Problematic Aspects of the Transition from 'Silo Approach' to 'Nexus Approach' in the Arab Region.- Chapter 3. Natural Capital Accounting and Ecosystem Services within the Water-Energy-Food Nexus: Local and Regional contexts.- Chapter 4. Pigs, Prawns and Power Houses: Politics in Water Resources Management.- Chapter 5. Mitigating the Korle Lagoon Ecological Pollution Problem in Accra, Ghana through a Framework for Urban Management of the Environment (FUME).- Chapter 6. La Plata River Basin: The Production of Scale in South American Hydropolitics.- Chapter 7. The Social Flows of Water in the Global South: Recognizing the Water-Gender-Health 'Nexus'.- Chapter 8. Water as Threat and Solution: Improving Health Outcomes in Developing Country Contexts.- Chapter 9. Household Water Insecurity in Different Settlement Categories of Ngamiland
, Botswana.- Chapter 10. Evolution or Illusion? The Okavango Delta Management Planning Process Versus the Conventional Planning System in the Face of Climate Change and Variability in Botswana.- Chapter 11. Evaluating an Agri-Environmental Network and its Role in Collaborative Problem-Solving.- Chapter 12. The New Green Revolution: Enhancing Rainfed Agriculture for Food and Nutrition Security in Eastern Africa.- Chapter 13. Afterward: Closing Thoughts on the Water-Food-Energy-Climate Nexus.