All Stories

  1. De-politicising seawater desalination: Environmental Impact Assessments in the Atacama mining Region, Chile
  2. Household water insecurity will complicate the ongoing COVID-19 response: Evidence from 29 sites in 23 low- and middle-income countries
  3. Lived experiences of ‘peak water’ in the high mountains of Nepal and Peru
  4. From needs to actions: prospects for planned adaptations in high mountain communities
  5. Exposing the myths of household water insecurity in the global north: A critical review
  6. Water sharing and the right to water: Refusal, rebellion and everyday resistance
  7. Health, environment and colonial legacies: Situating the science of pesticides, bananas and bodies in Ecuador
  8. Re-Theorizing Politics in Water Governance
  9. Assessing states: Water service delivery and evolving state–society relations in Accra, Ghana and Cape Town, South Africa
  10. The Legal Geographies of Water Claims: Seawater Desalination in Mining Regions in Chile
  11. Water is Medicine: Reimagining Water Security through Tr’ondëk Hwëch’in Relationships to Treated and Traditional Water Sources in Yukon, Canada
  12. The rural–urban equity nexus of Metro Manila’s water system
  13. Rural–urban water struggles: urbanizing hydrosocial territories and evolving connections, discourses and identities
  14. Evolving connections, discourses and identities in rural–urban water struggles
  15. Household water sharing: a missing link in international health
  16. Social Capital, political empowerment and social difference: a mixed-methods study of an ecotourism project in the rural Volta region of Ghana
  17. Small systems, big challenges: review of small drinking water system governance
  18. The human right to water and policy change in Cape Town, South Africa, and Accra, Ghana
  19. Developing new urban water supplies: investigating motivations and barriers to groundwater use in Cape Town
  20. Gender and marine protected areas: a case study of Danajon Bank, Philippines
  21. Household water sharing: A review of water gifts, exchanges, and transfers across cultures
  22. Indigenous women respond to fisheries conflict and catalyze change in governance on Canada’s Pacific Coast
  23. The antinomies of nature and space
  24. Critical video engagements: Empathy, subjectivity and changing narratives of water resources through participatory video
  25. Advancing methods for research on household water insecurity: Studying entitlements and capabilities, socio-cultural dynamics, and political processes, institutions and governance
  26. Water Materialities and Citizen Engagement: Testing the Implications of Water Access and Quality for Community Engagement in Ghana and South Africa
  27. Pathways for Participatory Water Governance in Ashaiman, Ghana: Learning from Institutional Bricolage and Hydrosocial Perspectives
  28. Worlding the Intangibility of Resilience: The Case of Rice Farmers and Water-Related Risk in the Philippines
  29. Advancing human capabilities for water security: A relational approach
  30. Political Ecologies of Global Health: Pesticide Exposure in Southwestern Ecuador's Banana Industry
  31. Framing community entitlements to water in Accra, Ghana: A complex reality
  32. Water, equity and resilience in Southern Africa: future directions for research and practice
  33. Political ecologies of the state: Recent interventions and questions going forward
  34. Multiple ontologies of water
  35. Inserting rights and justice into urban resilience: a focus on everyday risk
  36. Whose input counts? Evaluating the process and outcomes of public consultation through the BC Water Act Modernization
  37. Canadian Drinking Water Policy: Jurisdictional Variation in the Context of Decentralized Water Governance
  38. Navigating the tensions in collaborative watershed governance: Water governance and Indigenous communities in British Columbia, Canada
  39. Intersections of gender and water: comparative approaches to everyday gendered negotiations of water access in underserved areas of Accra, Ghana and Cape Town, South Africa
  40. Considering the human right to water from an environmental justice perspective
  41. Microbial risk governance: challenges and opportunities in fresh water management in Canada
  42. Deconstructing the Map after 25 Years: Furthering Engagements with Social Theory
  43. Using Subjectivity and Emotion to Reconsider Participatory Natural Resource Management
  44. Improving fisheries estimates by including women’s catch in the Central Philippines
  45. Drinking Water Quality Guidelines across Canadian Provinces and Territories: Jurisdictional Variation in the Context of Decentralized Water Governance
  46. Imaginative Geographies of Green: Difference, Postcoloniality, and Affect in Environmental Narratives in Contemporary Turkey
  47. What are some concerns related to how to communicate issues of water quality risks to the public.
  48. Gender and small‐scale fisheries: a case for counting women and beyond
  49. A comparative analysis of current microbial water quality risk assessment and management practices in British Columbia and Ontario, Canada
  50. Citizenshit: The Right to Flush and the Urban Sanitation Imaginary
  51. Participation, politics, and panaceas: exploring the possibilities and limits of participatory urban water governance in Accra, Ghana
  52. Recent waves of water governance: Constitutional reform and resistance to neoliberalization in Latin America (1990–2012)
  53. Contemporary Water Governance in the Global South
  54. State as Socionatural Effect: Variable and Emergent Geographies of the State in Southeastern Turkey
  55. Neo(liberal) citizens of Europe: politics, scales, and visibilities of environmental citizenship in contemporary Turkey
  56. Human Right to Water: Contemporary Challenges and Contours of a Global Debate
  57. Negotiating hydro-scales, forging states: Comparison of the upper Tigris/Euphrates and Jordan River basins
  58. Contested sustainabilities: assessing narratives of environmental change in southeastern Turkey
  59. Gender and emergent water governance: comparative overview of neoliberalized natures and gender dimensions of privatization, devolution and marketization
  60. Water Rich, Resource Poor: Intersections of Gender, Poverty, and Vulnerability in Newly Irrigated Areas of Southeastern Turkey
  61. Modernizing the nation: Postcolonialism, postdevelopmentalism, and ambivalent spaces of difference in southeastern Turkey
  62. Limits of territorially-focused conservation: a critical assessment based on cartographic and geographic approaches
  63. Irrigation, Gender, and Social Geographies of the Changing Waterscapes of Southeastern Anatolia
  64. Contested Waters: Conflict, Scale, and Sustainability in Aquatic Socioecological Systems
  65. Water and Conflict Geographies of the Southeastern Anatolia Project
  66. Tigris and Euphrates Rivers