Water insecurity in Indigenous Canada: a community-based inter-disciplinary approach

Author:

Hanrahan Maura1,Sarkar Atanu2,Hudson Amy3

Affiliation:

1. Humanities Programme and Environmental Policy Institute, Grenfell Campus, Memorial University, Corner Brook, NL, A2H 5G4, Canada

2. Division of Community Health and Humanities, Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University, St. John's, NL, A1B 3X5, Canada

3. NunatuKavut Community Council, Happy Valley-Goose Bay, Labrador, A0P 1C0, Canada

Abstract

Water insecurity in Northern Indigenous communities in Canada remains a pressing problem, with multiple dimensions and health impacts. We carried out a case study of long-term water insecurity in the Southern Inuit island community of Black Tickle, Labrador, where there is no piped water and people rely on an under-funded potable water dispensing unit (PWDU) and unmonitored water sources. Our community-based multi-disciplinary project involved qualitative and quantitative methods including key informant interviews, focus groups, a census, a literature review, water testing, and an engineering site visit. In Black Tickle, water security was chronically and severely compromised and was linked to poverty, food insecurity, men's health, and mental health. We have taken a materialist approach; accordingly, later project phases involve research aimed at identifying appropriate solutions, and conducting pre-engineering and engineering work. This article reports on the first two phases of the project, through which we described the problem and identified its impacts.

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Water Science and Technology

Reference42 articles.

1. The embodiment of inequality: health disparities in Aboriginal Canada;Adelson;Can. J. Public Health,2005

2. Auditor General 2011 The 2011 Status Report of the Auditor General of Canada to the House of Commons – Chapter 4: Programs for First Nations on Reserves. Ottawa. Available from: www.oag-bvg.gc.ca/internet/docs/parl_oag_201106_04_e.pdf, visited April 19, 2014. Office of the Auditor General, Ottawa, Ontario.

3. No taps, no toilets: First Nations and the Constitutional Rights to water in Canada;Boyd;McGill Law J.,2011

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