Water quality awareness and barriers to safe water provisioning in informal communities: A case study from Ndola, Zambia

Local water providers in developing nations typically view shallow hand-dug wells as traditional and backward sources of water supply. It has long been assumed that the urban poor do not have the ability to develop these in a way that allows them to be classified as ‘improved’ in terms of the Millen...

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Main Authors: Liddle Elisabeth S., Mager Sarah M., Nel Etienne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń 2014-12-01
Series:Bulletin of Geography. Socio-Economic Series
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/bog-2014-0052
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author Liddle Elisabeth S.
Mager Sarah M.
Nel Etienne
author_facet Liddle Elisabeth S.
Mager Sarah M.
Nel Etienne
author_sort Liddle Elisabeth S.
collection DOAJ
description Local water providers in developing nations typically view shallow hand-dug wells as traditional and backward sources of water supply. It has long been assumed that the urban poor do not have the ability to develop these in a way that allows them to be classified as ‘improved’ in terms of the Millennium Development Goal for water, believing that users do not understand the factors that constitute safe water and the threats to these sources. Our assessment of the level of environmental knowledge held by local water-users in Ndola in Zambia demonstrates a coherent understanding of the safety of their water sources, the quality of these, the threats to them, and the fundamentals of how their local hydrology works, all of which is contrary to the perspective of key informants who are involved in water supply. Despite their environmental awareness, the majority of users did not generally protect their wells from contamination nor treat their water. The apparent paradox between awareness of risks to water and implementing protection of that water source is a function of the complex suite of socially manifested attitudes, habits and behaviours when it comes to water protection and treatment, which is exacerbated by vulnerable community and family structures and entrenched poverty. For meaningful outcomes in improved access to safe water to be realised providers need to increase their engagement with the informal communities, moving deeper into community-based participatory planning and recognise the societal and cultural factors that are entrained into these communities water supply practices. A key part of this involves the need for providers to move away from simple knowledge-based education to the more holistic form of skill-based health education.
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spelling doaj-art-dd07c257e3a24cf18e38da461f0deb0c2025-08-20T03:19:53ZengNicolaus Copernicus University in ToruńBulletin of Geography. Socio-Economic Series2083-82982014-12-01262616718110.2478/bog-2014-0052Water quality awareness and barriers to safe water provisioning in informal communities: A case study from Ndola, ZambiaLiddle Elisabeth S.0Mager Sarah M.1Nel Etienne2University of Otago, Department of Geography, Po Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand; phone: +64 273 107 080;University of Otago, Department of Geography, Po Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand; phone: +64 212 661 507University of Johannesburg, School of Hospitality and Tourism, Faculty of Management, Johannesburg, South Africa; phone: +64 345 645 0Local water providers in developing nations typically view shallow hand-dug wells as traditional and backward sources of water supply. It has long been assumed that the urban poor do not have the ability to develop these in a way that allows them to be classified as ‘improved’ in terms of the Millennium Development Goal for water, believing that users do not understand the factors that constitute safe water and the threats to these sources. Our assessment of the level of environmental knowledge held by local water-users in Ndola in Zambia demonstrates a coherent understanding of the safety of their water sources, the quality of these, the threats to them, and the fundamentals of how their local hydrology works, all of which is contrary to the perspective of key informants who are involved in water supply. Despite their environmental awareness, the majority of users did not generally protect their wells from contamination nor treat their water. The apparent paradox between awareness of risks to water and implementing protection of that water source is a function of the complex suite of socially manifested attitudes, habits and behaviours when it comes to water protection and treatment, which is exacerbated by vulnerable community and family structures and entrenched poverty. For meaningful outcomes in improved access to safe water to be realised providers need to increase their engagement with the informal communities, moving deeper into community-based participatory planning and recognise the societal and cultural factors that are entrained into these communities water supply practices. A key part of this involves the need for providers to move away from simple knowledge-based education to the more holistic form of skill-based health education.https://doi.org/10.2478/bog-2014-0052water provisioningenvironmental awarenessparticipatory planningwater qualityshallow wells
spellingShingle Liddle Elisabeth S.
Mager Sarah M.
Nel Etienne
Water quality awareness and barriers to safe water provisioning in informal communities: A case study from Ndola, Zambia
Bulletin of Geography. Socio-Economic Series
water provisioning
environmental awareness
participatory planning
water quality
shallow wells
title Water quality awareness and barriers to safe water provisioning in informal communities: A case study from Ndola, Zambia
title_full Water quality awareness and barriers to safe water provisioning in informal communities: A case study from Ndola, Zambia
title_fullStr Water quality awareness and barriers to safe water provisioning in informal communities: A case study from Ndola, Zambia
title_full_unstemmed Water quality awareness and barriers to safe water provisioning in informal communities: A case study from Ndola, Zambia
title_short Water quality awareness and barriers to safe water provisioning in informal communities: A case study from Ndola, Zambia
title_sort water quality awareness and barriers to safe water provisioning in informal communities a case study from ndola zambia
topic water provisioning
environmental awareness
participatory planning
water quality
shallow wells
url https://doi.org/10.2478/bog-2014-0052
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