www.hydrol-earth-syst-sci.net/6/1/2002/ © Author(s) 2002. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. The ethics of socio-ecohydrological catchment management: towards hydrosolidarity 1Stockholm International Water Institute 2Dept of System Ecology, Stockholm University Email for corresponding author: Malin.Falkenmark@siwi.org Abstract. This paper attempts to clarify key biophysical issues and the problems involved in the ethics of socio-ecohydrological catchment management. The issue in managing complex systems is to live with unavoidable change while securing the capacity of the ecohydrological system of the catchment to sustain vital ecological goods and services, aquatic as well as terrestrial, on which humanity depends ultimately. Catchment management oriented to sustainability has to be based on ethical principles: human rights, international conventions, sustaining crucial ecological goods and services, and protecting ecosystem resilience, all of which have water linkages. Many weaknesses have to be identified, assessed and mitigated to improve the tools by which the ethical issues can be addressed and solved:
The new ethics have to incorporate principles that, on a catchment basis, allow for proper attention to the hungry and poor, upstream and downstream, to descendants, and to sites and habitats that need to be protected. Keywords: catchment, hydrosolidarity, ecosystem, water determinants, resilience, green water, blue water, sustainability science Final Revised Paper (PDF, 796 KB) Citation: Falkenmark, M. and Folke, C.: The ethics of socio-ecohydrological catchment management: towards hydrosolidarity, Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci., 6, 1-10, 2002. Bibtex EndNote Reference Manager |
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