Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 320
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-8476-8511-0 • Paperback • February 1999 • $77.00 • (£59.00)
978-1-4616-4214-5 • eBook • February 1999 • $73.00 • (£56.00)
Arnon Soffer is professor of geography at the University of Haifa, Israel.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 International Rivers
Chapter 3 The Nile Basin
Chapter 4 Geopolitics of the Euphrates and Tigris Drainage Basin
Chapter 5 The Jordan-Yarmuk Basin: Conflict over Little Water
Chapter 6 The Orontes River as a Geopolitical Problem
Chapter 7 "Internationalized" Water Sources: The Litani River
Chapter 8 International Groundwater Conflicts in the Making
Chapter 9 Nonconventional Solutions to the Problem of Water Shortages in the Middle East
Chapter 10 Conclusion
Chapter 11 Appendix: Metric Conversion Table
Chapter 12 References
Chapter 13 Index
Highlights the complexity of water issues in the region . . . provides a useful introduction to the elements of water scarcity that mark, and will continue to shape, the Middle East, whatever the political and environmental fortunes of the region may be.
— Shaul Cohen, University of Oregon; Middle East Journal
A comprehensive study covering the geo-politics of water conflict in the Middle East. Rivers of Fire is an important and well-written book that should be read by anyone interested in water and environmental problems in the Middle East and by those interested in the international politics of the region.
— International Journal of Middle East Studies
The book's greatest strength is that it provides five beautifully crafted regional hydro- and political geographies. . . . The book's greatest offering to the North American reader is its capacity for modeling. Conflicts among Middle Eastern nation-states sharing the Nile or the Tigris-Euphrates, for example, serve as fine counterparts to conflicts among the several federal states and provinces sharing the waters of the Colorado, the Columbia, or the Rio Grande.
— Professional Geographer
Ground breaking work... Soffer's work still remains one of the most extensive examinations of the crisis of water in the Middle East.
— American Journal of Islamic Social Studies
For questions concerning river sources, flow regimes, development projects, relations among riparian states, potential solutions, and future prospects . . . Soffer is the answer man.
— L. M. Lewis, Eastern Kentucky University; Choice Reviews, September 1999