Abstract
Water-related indicators have predominantly focused on water availability and water infrastructure; experiences with water access and use have received far less attention. However, the assessment of water security using disaggregated indicators that are more proximal to the human experience, i.e., household and individual access and use, has enormous potential for transforming our understanding of human well-being, in much the same way that the shift to experiential measures of food insecurity has been transformative. Water access and use shapes many aspects of economic well-being, food security, nutrition, and physical and mental health that have largely gone unappreciated in great part due to the lack of precise, high-resolution data on water insecurity. The recent advent of globally comparable measurements of water access and use with the Individual and Household Water Insecurity Experiences Scales has five major implications for more effective food and nutrition policy, i.e., for targeting, measuring impact, modeling, regulation design, and sectoral siloing. Experiences of water insecurity should be regularly measured worldwide in much the same way that food insecurity is because water is of intrinsic value, shapes food security and global health, and is critical for achieving many other development goals.
Original language | English (US) |
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Article number | 102138 |
Journal | Food Policy |
Volume | 104 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Oct 2021 |
Funding
SLY was supported by a Carnegie Corporation Fellowship and the generous support of the American people provided to the Feed the Future Sustainable Intensification Innovation Lab (SIIL) through the US Agency for International Development Cooperative Agreement AID-OAA-L-14-00006. I am grateful to the Young Research Group and Edward Frongillo for fruitful conversations that informed the writing of this article, to the HWISE-RCN community for their intellectual vibrancy (NSF BCS 1759972), and to Chris Barrett, Hilary Bethancourt, Anwar Naseem, Rafael P?rez-Escamilla, Carl Pray, Chris Udry, and Caitlin Walsh for reading drafts. Any mistakes are, of course, mine. SLY was supported by a Carnegie Corporation Fellowship and the generous support of the American people provided to the Feed the Future Sustainable Intensification Innovation Lab (SIIL) through the US Agency for International Development Cooperative Agreement AID-OAA-L-14-00006.
Keywords
- Household
- Indicator
- Individual
- Measurement
- Scale
- Water insecurity
- Water security
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Food Science
- Development
- Sociology and Political Science
- Economics and Econometrics
- Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law