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EXPLORING URBAN GOVERNANCE IN URBAN WATER SERVICE PROVISION IN ETHIOPIA
In: Journal of public administration, finance and law, Heft 28, S. 162-179
ISSN: 2285-3499
Understanding institutional persistence in Ukrainian water service provision sector
In: Institutional change in agriculture and natural resources volume 62
Transformation of Urban Water Service Provision: Potential of Hybrid Systems
In: Public works management & policy: a journal for the American Public Works Association, Band 25, Heft 2, S. 151-166
ISSN: 1552-7549
Rapid urbanization poses severe challenges to the water management of growing cities. Conventionally, the suitable way to solve problems has been to expand the capacity of existing centralized infrastructures. It is important to consider how resources of a city's inner water cycle could be utilized more efficiently, and how the system of provision shapes the functional roles of the service, the ways of using it, and ultimately the consumption itself. This consideration is the reference point of this paper in which we will explore hybrid systems of water management as a promising way to address these problems. We focus particularly on the relationship between water users and the water supply system. The study is based on interviews with water users and literature on the hybridization of water services. We reflect on these issues in relation to the context of transformation of infrastructure services. The results of this study indicate that the successful adaptation of hybrid systems has the potential to facilitate urban transformation. However, certain barriers deeply rooted in water management hinder it from reaching this potential.
Water service provision for the peri-urban poor in post-conflict Angola
In: Human settlements working paper series Water-6
This paper is an output of the Sida, DANIDA and DFID funded project entitled: Improving urban water and sanitation provision globally, through information and action driven locally. This project was carried out by IIED and five of its partners in Angola, Argentina, Ghana, India and Pakistan. The project aims to document innovative and inspiring examples of locally-driven water and sanitation initiatives in deprived urban areas. The project provides a basis for better understanding of how to identify and build upon local initiatives that are likely to improve water and sanitation services. The project also looks at how local organisations in those countries have managed to: scale up successful projects; work collaboratively; finance water and sanitation schemes; and use information systems such as mapping to drive local action and monitor improvements
Water Service Provision and Peacebuilding in East Timor : Exploring the Socioecological Determinants for Sustaining Peace
This article presents an examination of post-conflict water resource management in East Timor through the United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET) with the aim of contributing to our understanding of the opportunities and challenges inherent to the sustainable management of water resources in post-conflict countries and of gaining insight into its potential long-term benefits for sustaining peace. The article contributes one of the first theory-centred, empirical analyses of post-conflict water resource management, in which the challenges and failures of UNTAET in East Timor shed light on the opportunities and risks inherent to post-conflict water service provision for peacebuilding.
BASE
Anti-Privatisation Debates, Opaque Rules and 'Privatised' Water Services Provision: Some Lessons from Indonesia
In: IDS bulletin, Band 43, Heft 2
ISSN: 0265-5012, 0308-5872
Anti-privatisation debates, opaque rules and 'privatised' water services provision: some lessons from Indonesia
In: IDS bulletin, Band 43, Heft 2, S. 21-26
ISSN: 0265-5012, 0308-5872
World Affairs Online
Water service provision and peacebuilding in East Timor: exploring the socioecological determinants fur sustaining peace
In: Journal of intervention and statebuilding, Band 12, Heft 2, S. 185-207
ISSN: 1750-2977
World Affairs Online
Application of the "Urban Governance Index" to water service provisions: Between rhetoric and reality
In: Habitat international: a journal for the study of human settlements, Band 49, S. 435-444
Water Service Provision and Peacebuilding in East Timor: Exploring the Socioecological Determinants for Sustaining Peace
In: Journal of intervention and statebuilding, Band 12, Heft 2, S. 185-207
ISSN: 1750-2985
Anti-Privatisation Debates, Opaque Rules and 'Privatised' Water Services Provision: Some Lessons from Indonesia
In: IDS bulletin: transforming development knowledge, Band 43, Heft 2, S. 21-26
ISSN: 1759-5436
SSRN
How the European Citizens' Initiative 'Water and Sanitation is a Human Right!' Changed EU Discourse on Water Services Provision
In 2010 the United Nations General Assembly recognized the human right to water and sanitation in what is seen as a historical vote by water activists. Implementation of the right to water is imperative to achieve sustainable development. In 2011 the regulation for a European Citizens' Initiative (ECI) entered into force in the European Union. With such an initiative it is possible to propose an issue for European legislation by collecting one million signatures from citizens in at least seven Member States. The European federation of trade unions in the public services sector (EPSU) decided to take up the challenge to organise such an ECI and formed a diverse coalition of organisations and water activists that became known as 'Right2Water.' Their proposal was 'to implement the human right to water and sanitation in European law.' Although it was successful in achieving the required number of supporters, the European Commission answered that implementation of the human right to water was to be left to Member States and that there was no need to change existing legislation. The Right2Water movement aimed not as much to change legislation but more to challenge EU neoliberal policies and shift them from a 'market approach' to a 'rights-based approach.' This chapter looks at the factors that contributed to the success of 'Right2Water,' how the ideological debate around the human right to water took place during the campaign and the impact it had on EU discourse as well as on EU water policy.
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How the European Citizens' Initiative 'Water and Sanitation is a Human Right!' Changed EU Discourse on Water Services Provision
In: Utrecht Law Review, Band 16, Heft 2, S. 48-59
SSRN