Homelessness and water insecurity in the Global North: Trapped in the dwelling paradox

Author:

Meehan Katie1ORCID,Beresford Melissa2ORCID,Amador Cid Fausto3ORCID,Avelar Portillo Lourdes Johanna4ORCID,Marin Anna5,Odetola Marianne1,Pacheco‐Vega Raul6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography King's College London London UK

2. Department of Anthropology San José State University San José California USA

3. FLACSO Ciudad de México Mexico

4. UCSF Center for Vulnerable Populations, Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital and Trauma Center San Francisco California USA

5. Department of Geography Texas A&M University College Station Texas USA

6. Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, FLACSO México Ciudad de México Mexico

Abstract

AbstractIn this article, we introduce the “dwelling paradox” to explore how the state actively produces water insecurity for people experiencing homelessness in the Global North. We explain that the dwelling paradox is (1) produced by a modernist ideology of public service delivery that privileges water provision through private infrastructural connections in the home; (2) is reproduced by the welfare‐warfare state, which has increasingly weaponized public water facilities and criminalized body functions in public space; and (3) is actively contested by some houseless communities, who challenge hegemonic ideals of the “home”—and its water infrastructure—as a private, atomized space. In advancing a relational and spatial understanding of water insecurity, we use the dwelling paradox to illustrate how unhoused people are caught in a space of institutional entrapment that is forged by state power and amplified by anti‐homeless legislation. Such spaces of entrapment make it extremely difficult for unhoused people to achieve a safe, healthy, and thriving life—the basis of the human rights to water and sanitation.This article is categorized under:Human Water > Water Governance

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Ecology,Oceanography

Reference66 articles.

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