6 results on '"Leila M. Harris"'
Search Results
2. Water sharing, reciprocity, and need: A comparative study of interhousehold water transfers in sub-Saharan Africa
- Author
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Alexandra Brewis, Desire Tshala-Katumbay, Lee Cronk, Amber Wutich, Sera L. Young, Chad Staddon, Ellis Adjei Adams, Wendy Jepson, Mobolanle Balogun, Patrick Mbullo, Raymond Asare Tutu, Michael J. Boivin, Justin Stoler, Amber L. Pearson, Jessica Budds, Cassandra L. Workman, Alex Trowell, Leila M. Harris, Shalean M. Collins, Matthew C. Freeman, Asiki Gershim, Joshua D. Miller, Yihenew Tesfaye, Asher Y. Rosinger, and Kenneth Maes
- Subjects
Sub saharan ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Development economics ,Survey data collection ,Economic shortage ,Water sharing ,Business ,Household economics ,Reciprocity (cultural anthropology) ,Democracy ,media_common - Abstract
Water sharing between households could crucially mitigate short‐term household water shortages, yet it is a vastly understudied phenomenon. Here we use comparative survey data from eight sites in seven sub‐Saharan African countries (Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria, and Uganda) to answer three questions: With whom do households share water? What is expected in return? And what roles do need and affordability play in shaping those transfers? We find that water is shared predominantly between neighbors, that transfers are more frequent when water is less available and less affordable, and that most sharing occurs with no expectation of direct payback. These findings identify water sharing, as a form of generalized reciprocity, to be a basic and consistent household coping strategy against shortages and unaffordability of water in sub‐Saharan Africa.
- Published
- 2019
3. Exposing the myths of household water insecurity in the global north: A critical review
- Author
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Robert J. Patrick, Dacotah Splichalova, Nicole J. Wilson, Jonathan London, Gregory Pierce, Wendy Jepson, Rachel Arsenault, Amber L. Pearson, Lucero Radonic, Sameer H. Shah, Benjamin J. Pauli, Katie Meehan, Victoria Harrington, Yanna Lambrinidou, Christian Wells, Deborah McGregor, Cassandra L. Workman, Leila M. Harris, Alexandra Brewis, Melissa Beresford, Ellis Adjei Adams, Amanda Fencl, Amber Wutich, Sera L. Young, and Science, Technology, and Society
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colonialism ,social inequality ,Ecology ,Foundation (engineering) ,Ocean Engineering ,Mythology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,Colonialism ,household water insecurity ,water infrastructure ,Water infrastructure ,Race (biology) ,Alliance ,Political science ,Economic history ,Social inequality ,race ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Safe and secure water is a cornerstone of modern life in the global North. This article critically examines a set of prevalent myths about household water in high-income countries, with a focus on Canada and the United States. Taking a relational approach, we argue that household water insecurity is a product of institutionalized structures and power, manifests unevenly through space and time, and is reproduced in places we tend to assume are the most water-secure in the world. We first briefly introduce "modern water" and the modern infrastructural ideal, a highly influential set of ideas that have shaped household water provision and infrastructure development over the past two centuries. Against this backdrop, we consolidate evidence to disrupt a set of narratives about water in high-income countries: the notion that water access is universal, clean, affordable, trustworthy, and uniformly or equitably governed. We identify five thematic areas of future research to delineate an agenda for advancing scholarship and action-including challenges of legal and regulatory regimes, the housing-water nexus, water affordability, and water quality and contamination. Data gaps underpin the experiences of household water insecurity. Taken together, our review of water security for households in high-income countries provides a conceptual map to direct critical research in this area for the coming years. This article is categorized under: Human Water > Human Water Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Study, University of British Columbia; PLUS Alliance; Texas AM University; U.S. National Science FoundationNational Science Foundation (NSF) [BCS-17759972] Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Study, University of British Columbia; PLUS Alliance; Texas A&M University; U.S. National Science Foundation, Grant/Award Number: BCS-17759972
- Published
- 2020
4. Political Ecologies of Global Health: Pesticide Exposure in Southwestern Ecuador's Banana Industry
- Author
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Jerry Spiegel, Leila M. Harris, and Ben Brisbois
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Ecosystem health ,Praxis ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,0507 social and economic geography ,Environmental ethics ,Political ecology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Scholarship ,Politics ,0302 clinical medicine ,13. Climate action ,Ecological psychology ,Development economics ,Global health ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Sociology ,050703 geography ,Engaged scholarship ,Earth-Surface Processes ,media_common - Abstract
Pesticide exposure in Ecuador's banana industry reflects political economic and ecological processes that interact across scales to affect human health. We use this case study to illustrate opportunities for applying political ecology of health scholarship in the burgeoning field of global health. Drawing on an historical literature review and ethnographic data collected in Ecuador's El Oro province, we present three main areas where a political ecological approach can enrich global health scholarship: perceptive characterization of multi-scalar and ecologically entangled pathways to health outcomes; critical analysis of discursive dynamics such as competing scalar narratives; and appreciation of the environment-linked subjectivities and emotions of people experiencing globalized health impacts. Rapprochement between these fields may also provide political ecologists with access to valuable empirical data on health outcomes, venues for engaged scholarship, and opportunities to synthesize numerous insightful case studies and discern broader patterns.
- Published
- 2017
5. Gender and small-scale fisheries: a case for counting women and beyond
- Author
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Amanda C. J. Vincent, Danika Kleiber, and Leila M. Harris
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0106 biological sciences ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,Fishing ,Context (language use) ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Aquatic Science ,Oceanography ,Fisheries law ,01 natural sciences ,Fishery ,Gender research ,Scale (social sciences) ,Relevance (law) ,Gender analysis ,Marine ecosystem ,14. Life underwater ,Sociology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Marine ecosystem–scale fisheries research and management must include the fishing effort of women and men. Even with growing recognition that women do fish, there remains an imperative to engage in more meaningful and relevant gender analysis to improve socio-ecological approaches to fisheries research and management. The implications of a gender approach to fisheries have been explored in social approaches to fisheries, but the relevance of gender analysis for ecological understandings has yet to be fully elaborated. To examine the importance of gender to the understanding of marine ecology, we identified 106 case studies of small-scale fisheries from the last 20 years that detail the participation of women in fishing (data on women fishers being the most common limiting factor to gender analysis). We found that beyond gender difference in fishing practices throughout the world, the literature reveals a quantitative data gap in the characterization of gender in small-scale fisheries. The descriptive details of women’s often distinct fishing practices nonetheless provide important ecological information with implications for understanding the human role in marine ecosystems. Finally, we examined why the data gap on women’s fishing practices has persisted, detailing several ways in which commonly used research methods may perpetuate biased sampling that overlooks women’s fishing. This review sheds light on a new aspect of the application of gender research to fisheries research, with an emphasis on ecological understanding within a broader context of interdisciplinary approaches.
- Published
- 2014
6. Human Right to Water: Contemporary Challenges and Contours of a Global Debate
- Author
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Oriol Mirosa and Leila M. Harris
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Human rights ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Context (language use) ,Environmental ethics ,Sociology ,Social science ,Relation (history of concept) ,Earth-Surface Processes ,media_common ,Social movement - Abstract
In recent years, significant debate has taken place around the concept of the "human right to water". In this paper, we seek to respond to recent critiques and clarify the terms of the debate by presenting an in-depth exploration of the human right to water. We explore several critiques of the concept, situate it in the context of the current neoliberalization of water provision and in relation to contemporary water challenges, and present some examples of how it has been deployed to further the cause of access to water for vulnerable populations in varied contexts. We conclude that, rather than abandoning the concept as critics have suggested, the human right to water maintains importance as a discourse and strategy in the contemporary moment.
- Published
- 2011
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