Title: | Vol. 9, No.2:The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam and Ethiopia’s Succession in Hydro-legal Prominence: A Script in Legal History of Diplomatic Confront (1957-2013) |
Authors: | Kassa, Tadesse |
Keywords: | The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, Nile water resources development, Nile, legal diplomacy, Ethiopia, Egypt, Sudan. |
Issue Date: | Dec-2015 |
Publisher: | St. Mary's University |
Abstract: | This article argues that within the system of international law, while Ethiopia’s
equitable right of access to resources of the Nile is recognized as a matter of
settled principle, the law’s actual working is a coefficient of prior hydraulic
measures adopted on the ground rather than mere articulation of legal norms,
diplomatic civility or altercations. I also submit that the system of international
law still remains vital in resolving transboundary water issues, and yet, the
mechanics of law could not function optimally outside of power politic,
diplomatic dexterity and sincere commitment to the fundamental values it
upholds. In this light, and against a backdrop of Ethiopia’s relegated position in
the second half of the twentieth century, the paper concludes that today the
country’s relative renaissance in the Nile legal politics - which for the first time
captured serious downstream interest in riparian negotiations - is attributed not
to a change in the pertinence of the norms of international law nor to any
altruistic revision of positions in the lower reaches of the river, but rather to its
belated awakening in pursuing the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD)
as a national project of multifarious impact. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2739 |
Appears in Collections: | Mizan Law Review
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