scholarly journals The Virtual Water Flow of Crops in Semiarid Ceará, Brazil: the Impacts on the State’s Water Resources Management

Author(s):  
Sérgio Rodrigues Rocha ◽  
Ticiana De Carvalho Studart ◽  
Maria Manuela Portela ◽  
Martina Zelenakova ◽  
Rogério Soliani Studart Filho
2012 ◽  
Vol 26 (14) ◽  
pp. 3977-3993 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taleb M. Abu-Sharar ◽  
Emad K. Al-Karablieh ◽  
Munther J. Haddadin

2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 7619-7649 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. H. G. Savenije ◽  
A. Y. Hoekstra ◽  
P. van der Zaag

Abstract. This paper reviews the changing relation between man and water since the industrial revolution, the period that has been called the Anthropocene because of the unprecedented scale at which humans have altered the planet. We show how the rapidly changing reality urges us to continuously improve our understanding of the complex interactions between man and the water system. The paper starts with demonstrating that hydrology and the science of water resources management have played key roles in human and economic development throughout history; yet these roles have often been marginalised or obscured. Knowledge on hydrology and water resources engineering and management helped to transform the landscape, and thus also the very hydrology within catchments itself. It is only fairly recent that water experts have become self-conscious of such mechanisms, exemplified by several concepts that try to internalise them (integrated water resources management, eco-hydrology, socio-hydrology). We have reached a stage where a more systemic understanding of scale interdependencies can inform the sustainable governance of water systems, using new concepts like precipitationsheds, virtual water transfers, water footprint and water value flow.


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