4.3 Article Proceedings Paper

The peri-urban water poor:: citizens or consumers?

Journal

ENVIRONMENT AND URBANIZATION
Volume 18, Issue 2, Pages 333-351

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0956247806069608

Keywords

environmental sustainability; governance; infrastructure; periurban interface; poverty; water and sanitation

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Using the results of a comparative three-year research project in five metropolitan areas, this article reviews a range of practices in accessing water and sanitation by peri-urban poor residents and producers. It starts from the observation that neither centralized supply policies nor the market through, for example, large-scale profit-making enterprises are able to meet their needs. Although they are consumers insofar as they have no option but to pay market prices for water (and often for sanitation), the peri-urban poor are, in practice, sometimes regarded as citizens with basic entitlements such as the right to water. This article outlines a conceptual distinction between policy-driven and needs-driven practices in the access to peri-urban water and sanitation services. The case studies show that this access is mainly needs-driven and informal rather than the result of formal policies. The key to structural improvements in water and sanitation lies in the recognition of these practices and their articulation to the formal system under new governance regimes.

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