For the next decade, the global water crisis remains the risk of highest concern, and ranks ahead of climate change, extreme weather events, food crises and social instability. Across the globe, nearly one in ten people is without access to an improved drinking water source. Least Developed Countries (LDCs) especially in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) are the most affected, having disproportionately more of the global population without access to clean water than other major regions. Population growth, changing lifestyles, increasing pollution and accelerating urbanization will continue to widen the gap between the demand for water and available supply especially in urban areas, and disproportionately affect informal settlements, where the majority of SSA's urban population resides. Distribution and allocation of water will be affected by climate-induced water stresses, poor institutions, ineffective governance, and weak political will to address scarcity and mediate uncertainties in future supply. While attempts have been made by many scientists to examine different dimensions of water scarcity and urban population dynamics, there are few comprehensive reviews, especially focused on the particular situation in Sub-Saharan Africa. This paper contributes to interdisciplinary understanding of urban water supply by distilling and integrating relevant empirical knowledge on urban dynamics and water issues in SSA, focusing on progress made and associated challenges. It then points out future research directions including the need to understand how alternatives to centralized water policies may help deliver sustainable water supply to cities and informal settlements in the region.
Safe and secure water is a cornerstone of modern life in the global North. This article critically examines a set of prevalent myths about household water in high-income countries, with a focus on Canada and the United States. Taking a relational approach, we argue that household water insecurity is a product of institutionalized structures and power, manifests unevenly through space and time, and is reproduced in places we tend to assume are the most water-secure in the world. We first briefly introduce "modern water" and the modern infrastructural ideal, a highly influential set of ideas that have shaped household water provision and infrastructure development over the past two centuries. Against this backdrop, we consolidate evidence to disrupt a set of narratives about water in high-income countries: the notion that water access is universal, clean, affordable, trustworthy, and uniformly or equitably governed. We identify five thematic areas of future research to delineate an agenda for advancing scholarship and actionincluding challenges of legal and regulatory regimes, the housing-water nexus, water affordability, and water quality and contamination. Data gaps underpin the experiences of household water insecurity. Taken together, our review of water security for households in high-income countries provides a conceptual map to direct critical research in this area for the coming years.
Water sharing offers insight into the everyday and, at times, invisible
ties that bind people and households with water and to one another. Water
sharing can take many forms, including so-called “pure gifts,”
balanced exchanges, and negative reciprocity. In this paper, we examine water
sharing between households as a culturally-embedded practice that may be both
need-based and symbolically meaningful. Drawing on a wide-ranging review of
diverse literatures, we describe how households practice water sharing
cross-culturally in the context of four livelihood strategies (hunter-gatherer,
pastoralist, agricultural, and urban). We then explore how cross-cutting
material conditions (risks and costs/benefits, infrastructure and technologies),
socio-economic processes (social and political power, water entitlements,
ethnicity and gender, territorial sovereignty), and cultural norms (moral
economies of water, water ontologies, and religious beliefs) shape water sharing
practices. Finally, we identify five new directions for future research on water
sharing: conceptualization of water sharing; exploitation and status
accumulation through water sharing, biocultural approaches to the health risks
and benefits of water sharing, cultural meanings and socio-economic values of
waters shared; and water sharing as a way to enact resistance and build
alternative economies.
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