Read more
List of contents
Foreword 1. Introduction 2. Water Management Solutions: On Panaceas and Policy Transfer 3. Contextual Interaction Theory for Assessing Water Governance, Policy and Knowledge Transfer 4. How Contextual Factors Influence the Effectiveness of International Projects: The Case of Dutch-funded Flood Risk Management Projects in Romania 5. Testing of the Contextual Interaction Theory in the Evaluation of Cooperation and Collaboration of Water Management Projects in India 6. Contextual Considerations Shaping the Transferability of Policies for Drinking Water Source Protection: A Canadian Case Study 7. Translating Water Policy Innovations in Kazakhstan: The Importance of Context 8. Public Participation as an Essentially Contested Concept: Insights from Water Management in Turkey 9. Multi-Stakeholder Partnerships in Fragile Political Contexts: Experiences from the Palestinian Water and Waste Sector 10. Transferring International Commitments to the Local Level: The Case of Integrated Urban (Waste)water Management in Hanoi, Vietnam 11. Institutional Innovation of Water Governance in Mexico: The Case of Guadalupe Basin, near Mexico City 12. Translating the Global Climate Change Discourse to the Local: An Analysis of Dutch Storylines on Adaptation 13. Adaptive Responses to Drought and Water Deficiency: Transfer of Governance Approaches across South and North Europe 14. The Transfer of Building with Nature Approach in the Context of EU Natura 2000 15. Conclusions Index
About the author
Cheryl de Boer is a Post-Doctoral researcher at the Centre for Studies in Technology and Sustainable Development (CSTM), University of Twente, the Netherlands, as well as Coordinator of the Twente Water Centre.
Joanne Vinke-de Kruijf is a PhD candidate at CSTM and at the Water Engineering and Management Department of the University of Twente.
Gül Özerol is a researcher and PhD candidate at CSTM, University of Twente.
Hans Bressers is a Professor of Policy Studies and Environmental Policy and founder of CSTM, University of Twente, as well as Chair of the Twente Water Centre.
Summary
In an increasingly global community of researchers and practitioners, new technologies and communication means have made the transfer of policies from one country or region to another progressively more prevalent. This book aims to create a better understanding of such transfers in the water management sector.