Calming the waters: the East African community and conflict over the Nile resources
OUTPUT TYPE: Journal Article
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2007
TITLE AUTHOR(S): P.Kagwanja
KEYWORDS: CONFLICT RESOLUTION, EASTERN AFRICA, NILE RIVER, RESOURCE NEEDS
DEPARTMENT: Developmental, Capable and Ethical State (DCES)
Print: HSRC Library: shelf number 4923
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/5752
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/5752
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
Abstract
Control of the waters of the Nile Basin has been long contested among the ten African riparian states that sit within the wider catchment area. In colonial times, use of the Nile was regulated by treaties promulgated and supported under British rule. These agreements favoured Egyptian and, to a lesser extent, Sudanese primacy in controlling the great river. This situation began to be challenged in the 1960s with the end of colonial rule in the region, and these challenges have now again been renewed in recent years with the revival of the East African Community. The members of the EAC, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania, have a common interest in facilitating the economic development of the Lake Victoria Basin and by extension this gives them an incentive to take the long-standing issues over the Nile Waters and describes the activities of the revived EAC to demonstrate the ways in which this regional organization has, since 1999, elaborated new policies and structures to strengthen and sustain the Nile Basin Initiative and the Nile Basin River Commission.-
Related Research Outputs:
- Beyond community participation?: alternative routes to civil engagement and development in South Africa
- A comparative analysis of the financing of HIV/AIDS programmes in Botswana, Lesotho, Mozambique, South Africa, Swaziland and Zimbabwe, October 2003
- Early child development in resource-poor settings: balancing children's material and mental needs - a personal account
- Editorial: educational change and evaluation in eastern and southern Africa
- Conflict resolution in a turbulent region: the case of the inter-governmental authority on development (IGAD) in Sudan
- South Africa's role in conflict resolution and peacemaking in Africa: conference proceedings
- Introduction: South Africa, an African peacemaker?
- A long prelude to peace: South African involvement in ending Burundi's war
- Dealing with Africa's post-independence past: truth commissions, special courts, war-crimes trials and other methods
- The South African arms industry: redefining the boundaries
- Lateral migration in resource-intensive economies: technological learning and industrial policy
- Book review: Musisi, N.B. & Muwanga, N.K. 2003. Makerere University in transition 1993-2000. Oxford: James Currey Publishers, p. 103
- Reclaiming our lives: HIV and AIDS, women's land and property rights and livelihoods in southern and East Africa: narratives and responses
- Cultural diversity in conflict and peace making in Africa: enhancing mediators and facilitators' contribution to conflict resolution, peace-making and peace-building in Africa
- Innovation in resource-based technology clusters: investigating the lateral migration thesis: knowledge intensification in resource-base economies, technological learning & industrial policy
- Innovation in resource-based technology clusters: investigating the lateral migration thesis: muti from coal: science and politics of humic substance research in South Africa
- Innovation in resource-based technology clusters: investigating the lateral migration thesis
- Resource-based technology innovation in South Africa: Gunric and RGR valves
- Resource-based technology innovation in South Africa: final report
- Putting words in Ahmadinejad's mouth