3S Community based research reports:
Changes in fishing equipment used by communities living along the Sesan River – 2009;
Changes in paddy rice production along the Srepok River – 2009;
Benefits of natural plants along the Sesan River – 2009
Abandoned Villages along the Sesan River – 2007;
Reports or research on the 3S Rivers situation:
Baird, I. 2009. Best Practices on Compensation and Resettlement: The case of the Lower Sesan 2 dam. NGO Forum on Cambodia. Phnom Penh (available in both English language or Khmer language versions)
STRIVER Reports:
Technical Brief no.12. Water quality in the Sesan River. A limnological study of the Sesan River in Cambodia in the dry season: focus on toxic cyanobacteria and coliform bacteria (please also refer to the related poster) – 2009
Policy Brief no.12. Environmental flow, biodiversity and livelihoods – the causal chain – 2009
Policy Brief no.9. Environmental flows in IWRM – with reference to the hydropower regulated Glomma River in Norway and Sesan River in Vietnam/Cambodia – 2008
Baird, I., Meach, M. 2005. Sesan River fisheries monitoring in Ratanakiri Province, northeast Cambodia: Before and after the construction of the Yali Falls dam in the Central Highlands of Viet Nam. 3S Rivers Protection Network and the Global Association for People and Environment. Banlung, Ratanakiri Province, Cambodia.
Rutkow, E., Crider, C. and Giannini, T. 2005. Down River: The Consequences of Vietnam’s Se San River Dams on Life in Cambodia and their Meaning in International Law. NGO Forum on Cambodia. Phnom Penh.
Hirsch, P. and A. Wyatt. 2004. Negotiating local livelihoods: Scales of conflict in the Se San River Basin. Asia Pacific Viewpoint, 45, 51-68.
The Fisheries Office and NTFP. 2000. A study of the downstream impacts of the Yali Falls dam in the Se San River Basin in Ratanakiri Province, northeast Cambodia.
Publications on related topics:
Ryder, G. 2009. Powering 21st Century Cambodia with Decentralized Generation: A Primer for Rethinking Cambodiaʼs Electricity Future. NGO Forum on Cambodia. Phnom Penh.
Other resources:
Cambodia’s National Laws can be downloaded from the National Assembly or Open Development Cambodia websites