2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.114864
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Be like the running water: Assessing gendered and age-based water insecurity experiences with Six Nations First Nation

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Cited by 22 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…While herein we are focused explicitly on gendered experiences and identities, it is also vital to recognize that the lived experience of water insecurity is intimately shaped by many intersecting, interdependent identities and considerations, compounding each other to reshape risks in complex ways related to compounded historical oppressions and exclusions (e.g., Duignan et al, 2022; Truelove, 2019). These include identities related to race, class (Crow & Sultana, 2002), caste (Shahid, 2015; Shrestha et al, 2020), and migrant status (Sultana, 2021).…”
Section: Gender Concepts For Water Insecurity Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While herein we are focused explicitly on gendered experiences and identities, it is also vital to recognize that the lived experience of water insecurity is intimately shaped by many intersecting, interdependent identities and considerations, compounding each other to reshape risks in complex ways related to compounded historical oppressions and exclusions (e.g., Duignan et al, 2022; Truelove, 2019). These include identities related to race, class (Crow & Sultana, 2002), caste (Shahid, 2015; Shrestha et al, 2020), and migrant status (Sultana, 2021).…”
Section: Gender Concepts For Water Insecurity Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Colonial, racial, gendered, ableist, class, and caste systems of power and their place-based outcomes (re)produce household water insecurities, and associated adverse social, economic, physical, and mental wellbeing outcomes (Crow and Sultana, 2002;Daigle, 2018;Deitz and Meehan, 2019;Dewachter et al, 2018;Duignan et al, 2022;Gerlak et al, 2022;Jepson et al, 2017;Jones et al, 2005;Leder et al, 2017;Loftus, 2014;Lu et al, 2014;Mawani, 2022;Meehan et al, 2020;Méndez-Barrientos et al, 2022;O'Leary, 2019;Radonic and Jacob, 2021;Ranganathan, 2016;Shah et al, 2021;Sultana, 2009Sultana, , 2020Truelove, 2019;Wilson et al, 2021;Wolbring, 2011;Wutich et al, 2022). This section reviews water affordability and insecurity experiences at the intersections of gender and class oppression.…”
Section: Intersectionality Water Affordability and Insecuritymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The literature on tap water trust and bottled water using data from NHANES and other large US national surveys unfortunately does not report results for Indigenous respondents. However, many published case studies document that Indigenous communities and First Nations in the United States and Canada experience significantly higher levels of water insecurity, distrust in drinking water supplies, and dependency on bottled water than the non‐Indigenous population (e.g., Duignan et al, 2022; Wilson et al, 2023).…”
Section: Bottled/packaged Water Consumption and Income Race And Ethni...mentioning
confidence: 99%