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47 Vand. J. Transnat'l L. 1321 (2014)
The United Nations Watercourses Convention on the Dawn of Entry into Force

handle is hein.journals/vantl47 and id is 1373 raw text is: The United Nations Watercourses
Convention on the Dawn of Entry
Into Force
Ryan B. Stoa*
ABSTRACT
The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Non-
Navigational Uses of International Watercourses (Watercourses
Convention) entered into force in August 2014. Despite
overwhelming support when signed in 1997, the ratification
process has been slow. As a binding treaty, the Watercourses
Convention provides hope that its provisions will articulate
legal principles of transboundary water management capable of
promoting cooperation and regional agreements. Despite entry
into force, however, global support for the Watercourses
Convention is weak, concurrent efforts to develop treaty regimes
governing water resources create competition for resources and
may obscure understandings of international water law, and
the foundational principles of the Watercourses Convention
remain ambiguous. A case study of the discordant hydropolitics
of the Nile River Basin-perhaps the most significant
watercourse lacking a cooperative management agreement-best
illustrates these limitations. This Article provides an analysis of
international water law and the limitations of the Watercourses
Convention, considering the implications of entry into force.
While the Watercourses Convention creates a workable
framework for negotiating regional agreements, low levels of
support from UN member states, competing treaty instruments,
and ambiguous legal principles limit the potential impact of the
Watercourses Convention.
* Ryan B. Stoa is the Deputy Director of the Global Water for Sustainability
Program and a Fellow in Water Law and Policy at the Florida International University
College of Law. Contact: rstoa@fiu.edu. The author is grateful for research assistance
provided by Sylmarie Trujillo and Sharon Merrill.

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