References

  1. P.H. Gleick, Water and conflict: fresh water resources and international security, Int. Secur., 18 (1993) 79–112.
  2. T.F. Homer-Dixon, Environment, Scarcity, and Violence, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1999.
  3. K.A. Wittfogel, The Hydraulic Civilizations, W.L. Thomas, Ed., Man’s Role in Changing the Face of the Earth, University of Chicago Press, 1956, pp. 152–164.
  4. A.T. Wolf, Shared Waters: Conflict and Cooperation, Annu. Rev. Environ. Resour., 32 (2007) 3.1–3.29.
  5. McKinsey & Company, 2030 Water Resources Group `Charting Our Water Future ± Economic Frameworks to Inform Decision-Making, 2009, Available at: http://www.mckinsey.com/App_Media/Reports/Water/Charting_Our_Water_Future_Full_Report_001.pdf (Accessed 22 June 2017).
  6. S. Stetter, E. Herschinger, T. Teichler, M. Albert, Conflicts about water: securitizations in a global context, Cooperation Conflict, 46 (2010) 441–459.
  7. S. Yoffe, A.T. Wolf, M. Giordano, Conflict and cooperation over international freshwater resources: indicators of basins at risk, J. Am. Water Resour. Assoc., 39 (2003) 1109–1126.
  8. R. Aviram, D. Katz, D. Shmueli, Desalination as a game-changer in transboundary hydro-politics, Water Policy, 16 (2014) 609–624.
  9. B. Buzan, O. Wæver, J. de Wilde, Security: A New Framework for Analysis, Lynne Rienner Publications, 1998.
  10. O. Wæver, Securitization and Desecuritization, R. Lipschutz, Ed., On Security, Columbia University Press, New York, 1995, pp. 46–86.
  11. B. Buzan, People, States and Fear: An Agenda for Security Studies in the Post-Cold War Era, Lynne Rienner, 2nd ed., 1991.
  12. O. Wæver, European Security: Problems of Research on Non-Military Aspects (Copenhagen Papers of the Centre for Peace and Conflict Research, Copenhagen), 1987.
  13. O. Wæver, P. Lemaitre, E. Tromer, Eds., European Polyphony: Perspectives Beyond East-West Confrontation, Macmillan, London, 1989.
  14. N. Græger, Environmental security?, J. Peace Res., 33 (1996) 109–116.
  15. D.A. Baldwin, The concept of security, Rev. Int. Stud., 23 (1997) 5–26.
  16. D. Nathan, I. Fischhendler, Triggers for securitization: a discursive examination of Israeli–Palestinian water negotiations, Water Policy, 18 (2016) 20.
  17. I. Fischhendler, The securitization of water discourse: theoretical foundations, research gaps and objectives of the special issue, Int. Environ. Agreements Politics Law Econ., 15 (2015) 245–255.
  18. M. Zeitoun, B. Lankford, K. Bakker, D. Conway, Introduction: A Battle of Ideas for Water Security, B. Lankford, K. Bakker, M. Zeitoun, D. Conway, Eds., Water Security Principles, Perspectives and Practices, Routledge, London, 2013, pp. 1–11,.
  19. L. Leb, P. Wouters, The water security paradox and international law: securitization as an obstacle to achieving water security and the role of law in desecuritising the world’s most precious resource, B. Lankford, K. Bakker, M. Zeitoun, D. Conway, Eds., Water Security: Principles, Perspectives and Practices, 2013, pp. 26–45.
  20. T. Balzacq, Théories de la sécurité. Les approches critiques, Paris, Presses de SciencesPo, 2016.
  21. M. McDonald, Securitization and the Construction of Security, Eur. J. Int. Relat., 14 (2008) 563–587.
  22. R. Floyd, Towards a consequentialist evaluation of security: bringing together the Copenhagen and the Welsh schools of security studies, Rev. Int. Stud., 33 (2007) 327–350.
  23. B. Buzan, O. Wæver, Regions and Powers: The Structure of International Security, Cambridge University Press, 2003, p. 489.
  24. O. Wæver, The EU as a Security Actor: Reflections from a Pessimistic Constructivist on Post-Sovereign Security Orders, M. Kelstrup, M. Williams, Eds, International Relations Theory and the Politics of European Integration: Power, Security, and Community, Routledge, London, 2000, pp. 250–294.
  25. A. Behnke, No way out: desecuritization, emancipation and the eternal return of the political – a reply to Aradau, J. Int. Relat. Develop., 9 (2006) 62–69.
  26. P. Roe, Securitization and Minority Rights: Conditions of Desecuritization, Security Dialogue, 35 (2004) 279–294.
  27. K. Aggestam, Desecuritization of water and the technocratic turn in peacebuilding, Int. Environ. Agreements Politics Law Econ., 15 (2015) 327–340.
  28. P. Roe, Is securitization a ‘negative’ concept? Revisiting the normative debate over normal versus extraordinary politics, Security Dialogue, 43 (2012) 249–266.
  29. R. Floyd, Security and the Environment. Securitisation Theory and US Environmental Security Policy, Cambridge University Press, New York, 2010.
  30. T. Balzacq, The three faces of securitization: political agency, audience and context, Eur. J. Int. Relat., 11 (2005) 171–201.
  31. K. Grayson, Securitization and the boomerang debate: a rejoinder to Liotta and Smith-Windsor, Security Dialogue, 34 (2003) 337–343.
  32. S. Biba, Desecuritization in China’s Behavior towards Its Transboundary Rivers: the Mekong River, the Brahmaputra River, and the Irtysh and Ili Rivers, J. Contemporary China, 23 (2014) 21–43.
  33. D. Bigo, Security and immigration: Toward a critique of the governmentality of unease, Alternatives, 27 (2002) 63–92.
  34. N. Mirumachi, Securitising shared waters: an analysis of the hydropolitical context of the Tanakpur Barrage project between Nepal and India, Geog. J., 179 (2013) 309–319.
  35. M. Zeitoun, J. Warner, Hydro-hegemony: a framework for analysis of trans-boundary water conflicts, Water Policy, 8 (2006) 435–460.
  36. F.R. Pfetsch, A. Landau, Symmetry and Asymmetry in International Negotiations, Int. Negotiations, 5 (2000) 21–42.
  37. M.B. Salter, Securitization and desecuritization: a dramaturgical analysis of the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority, J. Int. Relat. Devel., 11 (2008) 321–349.
  38. N. Mirumachi, J.A. Allan, Revisiting Transboundary Water Governance: Power, Conflict, Cooperation and the Political Economy, CAIWA Conference Paper, 2007.
  39. M. Trombetta, Environmental security and climate change: analysing the discourse, Cambridge Rev. Int. Affairs, 21 (2008) 585–602.
  40. M.J. Trombetta, Rethinking the Securitization of Environment: Old Beliefs, New Insights, T. Balzacq, Ed., Securitization Theory: How Security Problems Emerge and Dissolve, 2010, Routledge, London, pp. 135–149.
  41. A. Turton, The hydropolitical dynamics of cooperation in Southern Africa, A. Turton, P. Ashton, E. Cloete, Eds., Sovereignty and Development: Hydro-political Drivers in the Okavango River basin, African Water Issues Research Unit (AWIRU), 2003.
  42. C.W. Sadoff, D. Grey, Beyond the river: the benefits of cooperation on international rivers, Water Policy, 4 (2002) 389–403.
  43. I. Fischhendler, D. Katz, The use of ‘security’ jargon in sustainable development discourse: evidence from UN Commission on Sustainable Development, Int. Environ. Agreements Politics Law Econ., 13 (2012) 321–342.
  44. L. Swatuk, A Nexus for Whom? Water Resources, Social Justice and Environmental Insecurity, Presentation during a Workshop on Environmental Security, School of Oriental and African Studies, 26 October, London, 2012.
  45. FOEME, Concerns of EcoPeace/Friends of the Earth Middle East to the World Bank Terms of References for the Red Sea- Dead Sea Water Conveyance Project, 5 October, 2011.
  46. World Bank, Red Sea–Dead Sea Water Conveyance Study program, 2013, Available at: http://go.worldbank.org/MXWJ6T5RS0 (Accessed 22 June 2017).
  47. K. Aggestam, A. Sundell, Depoliticising water conflict: functional peacebuilding in the Red Sea–Dead Sea water conveyance project, Hydrol. Sci. J., (2014). Doi:10.1080/02626667.2014.999778.
  48. O. Eran, G. Grimberg, M. Milner, The Water, Sanitation and Energy Crises in Gaza. Humanitarian, Environmental and Geopolitical Implications with Recommendations for Immediate Measures, EcoPeace & INSS, 2014.
  49. C. King, H. Jaafar, Rapid assessment of the water-energy-foodclimate nexus in six selected basins of North Africa and West Asia undergoing transitions and scarcity threats, Int. J. Water Resour. Develop., 31 (2015) 343–359.
  50. R. Quba’a, M. El-Fadel, M. Abou Najm, I. Alameddine, Comparative assessment of joint water development initiatives in the Jordan River Basin, Int. J. River Basin Manage., 15 (2017) 115–131.
  51. I. El-Anis, R. Smith, Freshwater security, conflict and cooperation. The case of the Red Sea Dead Sea conduit project, J. Developing Soc., 29 (2013) 1–22.
  52. A. Rabadi, The Red Sea Dead Sea desalination project at Aqaba, Desal. Wat. Treat., 57 (2016) 22713–22717.
  53. Palestinian Authority’s letter to the World Bank. Available at: http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/COUNTRIES/MENAEXT/EXTREDSEADEADSEA/0,,contentMDK:23442260~menuPK:9258688~pagePK:64168445~piPK:64168309~theSitePK:5174617,00.html (Accessed 22 June 2017).