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Target ten of Millennium Development Goals (MDG) seeks to halve the proportion of people without sustainable and safe access to water. Although attempts have been made to link the MDGs and human rights, promoting a right to water achieves little if institutions, norms and values remain unchanged.
A paper from the University of Bradford in the UK analyses challenges to putting the right to water into practice. A human right to water means giving priority to drinking water supply. It highlights that providing water services is not charity. Governments should be responsible for ensuring that the human right of those who do not have access is not violated. It also emphasises that discrimination and inequality cannot be tolerated, and that responsibility for addressing violations is universal.
But do poor people benefit from a ‘right to water’ discourse? Constitutional provisions for a formal right to water only exist in a few countries. It is important to examine how effective these have been, but statistics are not always accurate. The study shows:
Source(s):
‘Right to Water and Access to Water: An Assessment’, Journal of
International Development, 19, pp511–526, by P. B. Anand, 2007
id21 Research Highlight: 8 June 2007
Further Information:
PB Anand
Centre for International Development
University of Bradford
Bradford, BD7 1DP
UK
Tel:
+44 (0)1274 233957
Fax:
+44 (0)1274 235280
Contact the contributor: p.b.anand@bradford.ac.uk
Centre for International Development, University of Bradford, UK
Other related links:
'Water rights for water governance: opportunities and challenges of
regulation in developing countries'
'Time to get serious about the right to water'
'Providing clean water and sanitation: the greatest global challenge'
'New directions for water governance' id21 insights, Issue #67, June 2007
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The Right to Water
'The Right to Water', WHO 2003 (PDF)
'Achieving water security'