2016
DOI: 10.2166/wh.2016.258
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Inequalities in microbial contamination of drinking water supplies in urban areas: the case of Lilongwe, Malawi

Abstract: Over past decades strategies for improving access to drinking water in cities of the Global South have mainly focused on increasing coverage, while water quality has often been overlooked. This paper focuses on drinking water quality in the centralized water supply network of Lilongwe, the capital of Malawi. It shows how microbial contamination of drinking water is unequally distributed to consumers in low-income (unplanned areas) and higher-income neighbourhoods (planned areas). Microbial contamination and re… Show more

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Cited by 43 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…By shifting the focus of research from formal designs and official rules of operation to the detailed documentation of everyday practices of tinkering with water infrastructure, we show that Moamba's water infrastructure is constantly in-the-making. Just like other researchers who engage with everyday practices to show how actors exercise agency to (re)produce disparate access to water (see amongst others [6][7][8][9]18]), our findings reveal how water infrastructure itself co-constitutes social processes. As pointed out in this paper, the physical environment, in which infrastructure is constructed, is never fully known nor knowable as it constantly changes due to human interventions as well as natural processes.…”
Section: Conclusion and Discussionsupporting
confidence: 61%
“…By shifting the focus of research from formal designs and official rules of operation to the detailed documentation of everyday practices of tinkering with water infrastructure, we show that Moamba's water infrastructure is constantly in-the-making. Just like other researchers who engage with everyday practices to show how actors exercise agency to (re)produce disparate access to water (see amongst others [6][7][8][9]18]), our findings reveal how water infrastructure itself co-constitutes social processes. As pointed out in this paper, the physical environment, in which infrastructure is constructed, is never fully known nor knowable as it constantly changes due to human interventions as well as natural processes.…”
Section: Conclusion and Discussionsupporting
confidence: 61%
“…Water access inequalities in SSA exist not only between urban and rural areas, but also within other sub‐national geographical units (Pullan et al, ; Yu et al, ) and across household socio‐economic strata. Indeed, some studies show that intra‐urban inequalities in water quality may be rooted in historically uneven infrastructure development and policies (Boakye‐Ansah et al, ). In urban Lilongwe, Malawi, Rusca et al .…”
Section: Water Access Inequalities In Sub‐saharan Africamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some use wooden planks to cover water storage containers or, for lack of space, choose to store containers in unhygienic open environments (Figure ), while others avoid boiling unsafe water because they do no not have surplus containers. Households unable to buy enough water for household use may intentionally avoid rinsing containers (Boakye‐Ansah, Ferrero, Rusca, & van der Zaag, ). Poor households face tougher choices between safe, costly water sources vs cheaper, unsafe sources.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%