Surface water flow theory application to public policy development and adaptation for arid and semi-arid regions

Regions that had acceptable levels of water resources are becoming arid due to global warming and human-caused damage. Yet, public policies in such regions remain unsuitable for local conditions. Although this is owed to broad economic, political, and engineering factors, this paper focuses on water...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Michel Soto Chalhoub
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-01-01
Series:Cogent Environmental Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311843.2017.1390030
id doaj-1ef8dd2afe37443fae940386722d7892
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1ef8dd2afe37443fae940386722d78922021-03-02T14:23:43ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Environmental Science2331-18432017-01-013110.1080/23311843.2017.13900301390030Surface water flow theory application to public policy development and adaptation for arid and semi-arid regionsMichel Soto Chalhoub0Notre Dame UniversityRegions that had acceptable levels of water resources are becoming arid due to global warming and human-caused damage. Yet, public policies in such regions remain unsuitable for local conditions. Although this is owed to broad economic, political, and engineering factors, this paper focuses on water project methodologies and local policy design toward sustainable development. Water surface flow formulas utilize simplified assumptions adequate for perennial rivers, but require upgrades to accommodate arid regions and seasonal river behavior. The paper proposes a framework that links engineering to public policy using field data collected in Mount Lebanon, where drought periods are increasing. A dependent variable is defined as an index about community benefits based on water projects. Four independent variables are defined as (X1) the extent to which local communities would contribute to the engineering management and maintenance of water facilities, (X2) the ability to use project output for power supply, (X3) the potential use for agricultural purposes, and (X4) local community amenability and support for the privatization of water civil works. Results showed a statistically significant and positive relationship with X1, X2, and X3 and negative correlation with X4. Public policies need to be designed to involve local communities.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311843.2017.1390030public policysurface watersustainable developmentopen channelriver engineering methodologysemi-arid regions
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michel Soto Chalhoub
spellingShingle Michel Soto Chalhoub
Surface water flow theory application to public policy development and adaptation for arid and semi-arid regions
Cogent Environmental Science
public policy
surface water
sustainable development
open channel
river engineering methodology
semi-arid regions
author_facet Michel Soto Chalhoub
author_sort Michel Soto Chalhoub
title Surface water flow theory application to public policy development and adaptation for arid and semi-arid regions
title_short Surface water flow theory application to public policy development and adaptation for arid and semi-arid regions
title_full Surface water flow theory application to public policy development and adaptation for arid and semi-arid regions
title_fullStr Surface water flow theory application to public policy development and adaptation for arid and semi-arid regions
title_full_unstemmed Surface water flow theory application to public policy development and adaptation for arid and semi-arid regions
title_sort surface water flow theory application to public policy development and adaptation for arid and semi-arid regions
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Environmental Science
issn 2331-1843
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Regions that had acceptable levels of water resources are becoming arid due to global warming and human-caused damage. Yet, public policies in such regions remain unsuitable for local conditions. Although this is owed to broad economic, political, and engineering factors, this paper focuses on water project methodologies and local policy design toward sustainable development. Water surface flow formulas utilize simplified assumptions adequate for perennial rivers, but require upgrades to accommodate arid regions and seasonal river behavior. The paper proposes a framework that links engineering to public policy using field data collected in Mount Lebanon, where drought periods are increasing. A dependent variable is defined as an index about community benefits based on water projects. Four independent variables are defined as (X1) the extent to which local communities would contribute to the engineering management and maintenance of water facilities, (X2) the ability to use project output for power supply, (X3) the potential use for agricultural purposes, and (X4) local community amenability and support for the privatization of water civil works. Results showed a statistically significant and positive relationship with X1, X2, and X3 and negative correlation with X4. Public policies need to be designed to involve local communities.
topic public policy
surface water
sustainable development
open channel
river engineering methodology
semi-arid regions
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311843.2017.1390030
work_keys_str_mv AT michelsotochalhoub surfacewaterflowtheoryapplicationtopublicpolicydevelopmentandadaptationforaridandsemiaridregions
_version_ 1724234962716065792