2020
DOI: 10.2166/wp.2020.231
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Upstream-downstream linkages in Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna basin: the hydro-social imperatives

Abstract: To manage the transboundary water resources of the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna (GBM) River Basin, it is important to identify and understand the complex upstream-downstream linkages in the basin. This paper provides a comprehensive overview of social, economic and cultural processes of the GBM Basin and examines existing mechanisms for governing the shared water resources. It draws attention to the uneven power relations between countries that share the basin and how it affects transboundary water governance. Th… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…This has enabled India to partly control the headwaters of the Indus, which are shared between India and Pakistan, and continues to shape post‐partition India and Pakistan geopolitics (Gilmartin, 2020). Its river‐sharing agreements with Nepal and Bangladesh allow India even more control (Pandey et al., 2020). In the present, India is planning a National River‐Linking Project, which includes several interbasin water transfers with international implications (Iyer, 2012).…”
Section: Big Water Infrastructure Scholarship: Taking Stock and Synth...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This has enabled India to partly control the headwaters of the Indus, which are shared between India and Pakistan, and continues to shape post‐partition India and Pakistan geopolitics (Gilmartin, 2020). Its river‐sharing agreements with Nepal and Bangladesh allow India even more control (Pandey et al., 2020). In the present, India is planning a National River‐Linking Project, which includes several interbasin water transfers with international implications (Iyer, 2012).…”
Section: Big Water Infrastructure Scholarship: Taking Stock and Synth...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Instead, hydrosocial scholarship examines the materiality of territory through water and, as Rogers and Wang (2020) show, the social and economic processes that back infrastructural projects. Hydrosocial territories shift understandings of how water is configured within and across states (Pandey et al 2020; Miller et al 2021). For instance, Menga and Swyngedouw's (2018) edited collection shows how state-building proceeds through techno-political relations in which contests over water co-constitute hydrosocial territories.…”
Section: Hydrosocial Spacesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the meantime, the increasing demand for freshwater for rapidly growing economies and the rising dependence of the downstream on mountain water (A. Pandey et al, 2020;Viviroli et al, 2020) will lead to more imbalance between supply and demand. Often, the most vulnerable are those residing in transboundary basins such as the Indus Basin where there is dense population and large irrigation areas .…”
Section: Impacts At Transboundary Scalementioning
confidence: 99%