2016
DOI: 10.2458/v23i1.20776
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Irrigation in the Khorezm oasis, past and present: a political ecology perspective

Abstract: The Khorezm oasis sits at the epicenter of an environmental disaster. Since the late 19 th century, the continual expansion of irrigation in this region has altered the natural hydrology of the Amu Darya delta, leading to widespread desertification and the near total disappearance of the world's fourth largest lake, the Aral Sea. The situation is widely acknowledged as an environmental catastrophe of unprecedented scale, and yet it is not the first irrigation crisis in Khorezmian history. Numerous events of ir… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Human life in Central Asia has for millennia been shaped by, and shaped, hydrological systems. The volume of water in the region's rivers, and their courses, has been dramatically altered as irrigation systems, dams and dykes have been built and destroyed within different political formations, for economic development or political domination, or as acts of war (Boroffka, 2010;Brite, 2016;Oberh€ ansli et al, 2007;Stride et al, 2009;Wood, 1876). Before the 20th century, the Aral Sea had receded twice owing at least partly to human interventions (Boroffka et al, 2005).…”
Section: Water In Soviet Central Asiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Human life in Central Asia has for millennia been shaped by, and shaped, hydrological systems. The volume of water in the region's rivers, and their courses, has been dramatically altered as irrigation systems, dams and dykes have been built and destroyed within different political formations, for economic development or political domination, or as acts of war (Boroffka, 2010;Brite, 2016;Oberh€ ansli et al, 2007;Stride et al, 2009;Wood, 1876). Before the 20th century, the Aral Sea had receded twice owing at least partly to human interventions (Boroffka et al, 2005).…”
Section: Water In Soviet Central Asiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the Murghab delta of southern Turkmenistan in the same period, detailed survey, paleobotanical, and geoarchaeological analyses have shown that there was a similar, dualistic model of oasis inhabitation by elites and rural agropastoralists (Markofsky et al, 2016: 17; Rouse and Cerasetti, 2016: 11–12). It seems highly plausible therefore that in the southern Central Asian oases, diverse production systems were maintained even as complex irrigation works were established in the first millennium BC and first millennium AD (Beckwith, 2009: 326–328; Brite, 2016; Stride, 2007; Stride et al, 2009).…”
Section: The Khorezm Oasismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The oasis landscapes of Khorezm Province, nestled within the heart of Uzbekistan, have been witness to a profound transformation driven by anthropogenic activities [1]. As a cradle of ancient civilizations, this region has sustained human settlement for centuries through its fertile lands, intricate irrigation systems, and the delicate balance of its ecosystems [2,3]. However, the past few decades have seen an unprecedented shift in the dynamics of these landscapes, ushered in by human interventions ranging from agricultural practices to urbanization [4,5].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%