Authors
Giuliano Di Baldassarre, Murugesu Sivapalan, Maria Rusca, Christophe Cudennec, Margaret Garcia, Heidi Kreibich, Megan Konar, Elena Mondino, Johanna Mård, Saket Pande, Matthew R Sanderson, Fuqiang Tian, Alberto Viglione, Jing Wei, Yongping Wei, David J Yu, Veena Srinivasan, Günter Blöschl
Publication date
2019/8
Journal
Water Resources Research
Volume
55
Issue
8
Pages
6327-6355
Description
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the United Nations Agenda 2030 represent an ambitious blueprint to reduce inequalities globally and achieve a sustainable future for all mankind. Meeting the SDGs for water requires an integrated approach to managing and allocating water resources, by involving all actors and stakeholders, and considering how water resources link different sectors of society. To date, water management practice is dominated by technocratic, scenario‐based approaches that may work well in the short term but can result in unintended consequences in the long term due to limited accounting of dynamic feedbacks between the natural, technical, and social dimensions of human‐water systems. The discipline of sociohydrology has an important role to play in informing policy by developing a generalizable understanding of phenomena that arise from interactions between water and …
Total citations
2018201920202021202220232024122977878666
Scholar articles
G Di Baldassarre, M Sivapalan, M Rusca, C Cudennec… - Water Resources Research, 2019