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Informationen zum Autor Anik Bhaduri , Sustainable Water Future Programme, Brisbane,Australia Claudia Ringler, International Food Policy Research Institute Ines Dombrowsky, German Development Institute / Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE) Rabi Mohtar, Texas AM University, USA Waltina Scheumann , German Development Institute / Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE) Zusammenfassung It is beyond doubt that the interconnectedness between food, energy, water security and environmental sustainability exists and is getting amplified with increased globalization. It has been recognized that efforts to address only one part of a systemic problem by neglecting other inherently interlinked aspects may not lead to desirable and sustainable outcomes. In this perspective, policy- and decision- making requires a nexus approach that reduces trade-offs and builds synergies across sectors, and helps to reduce costs and increase benefits for humans and nature compared to independent approaches to the management of water, energy, food and the environment. In the past, work related to the Nexus has looked at the interactions between water and food or water and energy, but there has been a reluctance to bring forward a broader systematic perspective that captures the multiple sectors and resource dependencies while understanding its cost to the environment if we neglect these linkages. This book is a compilation of thirteen papers published previously as a special issue of Water International , contains significant pieces of work on the W-E-F nexus focusing on relevant tools, solutions and governance at local and broader human scales. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction Sustainability in the water-energy-food nexusAnik Bhaduri! Claudia Ringler! Ines Dombrowski! Rabi Mohtar and Waltina Scheumann1. The impact of water users' associations on the productivity of irrigated agriculture in Pakistani PunjabDawit K. Mekonnen! Hira Channa and Claudia Ringler 2. Water-energy-food (WEF) Nexus Tool 2.0: guiding integrative resource planning and decision-makingBassel T. Daher and Rabi H. Mohtar 3. Bioenergy! food security and poverty reduction: trade-offs and synergies along the water-energy-food security nexusAlisher Mirzabaev! Dawit Guta! Jann Goedecke! Varun Gaur! Jan Börner! Detlef Virchow! Manfred Denich and Joachim von Braun 4. Application of a water-energy-food nexus framework for the Duero river basin in SpainBeatriz Mayor! Elena López-Gunn! Fermín I. Villarroya and Esperanza Montero 5. Reuse of oil and gas produced water in south-eastern New Mexico: resource assessment! treatment processes! and policyEnid J. Sullivan Graham! Anne C. Jakle and F. David Martin 6. Water-energy-food nexus in a transboundary context: the Euphrates-Tigris river basin as a case studyAysegül Kibaroglu and Sezin Iba Gürsoy 7. Water-food-energy nexus in Chile: the challenges due to global change in different regional contextsFrancisco J. Meza! Sebastian Vicuna! Jorge Gironás! David Poblete! Francisco Suárez and Melanie Oertel 8. How would the Rogun Dam affect water and energy scarcity in Central Asia?Maksud Bekchanov! Claudia Ringler! Anik Bhaduri and Marc Jeuland 9. Governance of transitions towards sustainable development - the water-energy-food nexus in CyprusJohannes Halbe! Claudia Pahl-Wostl! Manfred A. Lange and Christina Velonis 10. The water-energy-food (WEF) security nexus: the policy perspective of BangladeshAnimesh K. Gain! Carlo Giupponi and David Benson 11. Where is the power? Transnational networks! authority and the dispute over the Xayaburi Dam on the Lower Mekong MainstreamOliver Hensengerth ...
Summary
Understanding the Water Energy Food nexus is important at a time when we are geared up for implementation of the SDGs which are currently formulated as individual goals, but they are not at all independent. This book will help different actors and stakeholders for moving towards action on the SDGs.