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WATER MANAGEMENT IN ISLAM
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924.jpg WATER MANAGEMENT IN ISLAM

Edited by Naser I. Faruqui, Asit K. Biswas, and Murad J. Bino

IDRC/UNU Press 2001
ISBN 0-88936-924-0
e-ISBN 1-55250-133-7
170 pp.

 Browse from this page Download e-book Purchase book online

Disponible en français
In the United States and Europe, contact UNU Press, 53-70, Jingumae 5-chome, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo 150, Japan.

In the Middle East and North Africa, water is rapidly becoming the key development issue. In response, policymakers have proposed or tried to implement policies such as higher water tariffs or privatization, but have done so without considering local culture and values. Yet culture, including religion, clearly influences how people perceive and manage a resource such as water, and must be considered during policy development.

This book presents Islamic perspectives on a number of proposed water-management policies, including water demand management, wastewater reuse, and fair pricing. The book opens avenues for a wider dialogue amongst researchers working at identifying the most promising water management policies, adds to our knowledge of some of the influences on formal policy and informal practice, and makes these ideas available to a broader public. It dispels common misconceptions about the Islamic view on water-management practices, such as selling water and wastewater reuse, and serves as a concrete example of the benefit of examining development in the context of values and culture.

Water Management in Islam will interest researchers, scholars, and students in natural resource management, Islamic studies, Middle Eastern studies, development studies, and public policy. It will also be of interest to professionals, including policymakers, in donor organizations, development organizations, NGOs, and government departments and agencies, both North and South, working in the area of water management.

THE EDITORS

Naser I. Faruqui is Senior Program Specialist at the International Development Research Centre in Ottawa, Canada. He was selected in 1999 by the International Water Resources Association as 1 of 14 water leaders of the next generation, worldwide.

Asit K. Biswas is President of the Third World Institute for Water Management in Mexico. He is a member of the World Commission on Water and Past President of the International Water Resources Association.

Murad J. Bino is Executive Director of the Inter-Islamic Network on Water Resources Development and Management in Amman, Jordan.

Related IDRC Reports link:
Identifying Islamic Approaches to Water Management by Keane Shore

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 Document(s)

Foreword Caroline Pestieau 2001


Preface Naser I. Faruqui, Asit K. Biswas & Murad J. Bino 2001


Acknowledgements Naser I. Faruqui 2001


Introduction Naser I. Faruqui 2001


Islamic sources Naser I. Faruqui and Odeh Al-Jayyousi 2001


List of abbreviations 2001


1. Islam and water management: Overview and principles Naser I. Faruqui 2001


2. Islamic water management and the Dublin Statement Odeh Al-Jayyousi 2001


3. Islam and the environment Hussein A. Amery 2001


4. Water conservation through public awareness based on Islamic teachings in the Eastern Mediterranean region Sadok Atallah, M. Z. Ali Khan, and Mazen Malkawi 2001


5. Water conservation through community institutions in Pakistan: Mosques and religious schools S. M. S. Shah, M. A. Baig, A. A. Khan, and H. F. Gabriel 2001


6. Water demand management in Saudi Arabia Walid A. Abderrahman 2001


7. Sociocultural acceptability of wastewater reuse in Palestine Nader Al Khateeb 2001


8. Water rights and water trade: An Islamic perspective M. T. Kadouri, Y. Djebbar, and M. Nehdi 2001


9. Ownership and transfer of water and land in Islam Dante A. Caponera 2001


10. Water markets and pricing in Iran Kazem Sadr 2001


11. Intersectoral water markets in the Middle East and North Africa Naser I. Faruqui 2001


12. Management of shared waters: A comparison of international and Islamic law Iyad Hussein and Odeh Al-Jayyousi 2001


Glossary of Arabic and Islamic terms 2001


Editors and Workshop participants 2001




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