Introduction: Rethinking Water Security in a Globalised World: Steps to Meeting SDG6
Chad Staddon and Christopher A. Scott
1. Putting water security to work: addressing global challenges
Chad Staddon and Christopher A. Scott
2. Is water security just? Concepts, tools and missing links
Sarah Wade
3. Challenges in meeting water security and resilience
Vijay P. Singh
4. The cultural dimensions of household water security: the case of Kathmandu’s stone spout systems
Olivia Molden, Nicholas Griffin and Katie Meehan
5. Contested access: improving water security through benefit sharing
Bimo A. Nkhata
6. Why doesn’t every family practice rainwater harvesting? Factors that affect the decision to adopt rainwater harvesting as a household water security strategy in central Uganda
Chad Staddon, Josh Rogers, Calum Warriner, Sarah Ward and Wayne Powell
7. Water security and the pursuit of food, energy, and earth systems resilience
Christopher A. Scott, Tamee R. Albrecht, Rafael De Grenade, Adriana Zuniga-Teran, Robert G. Varady and Bhuwan Thapa
8. Unraveling transboundary water security in the arid Americas
Tamee R. Albrecht, Robert G. Varady, Adriana A. Zuniga-Teran, Andrea K. Gerlak, Rafael Routson De Grenade, América Lutz-Ley, Facundo Martín, Sharon B. Megdal, Francisco Meza, Diego Ocampo Melgar, Nicolás Pineda, Facundo Rojas, Rossi Taboada and Bram Willems
9. De-nationalization and de-securitization of transboundary water resources: the Israeli–Palestinian case
David B. Brooks and Julie Trottier
Chad Staddon is a Professor of Resource Economics and Policy at the University of the West of England. His research focusses on the social, political and economic issues related to water services, particularly drinking water. Current projects include the historical geography of urban water systems around the world, water-energy trade offs in unconventional oil and gas operations and appropriate socio-technologies for achieving universal access to safe water (SDG6). He received his PhD in Geography from the University of Kentucky in 1996 for research on the political economy of water (mis)management in post-communist Bulgaria.
Christopher A. Scott is the Director of the Udall Center for Studies in Public Policy and Professor of Geography, Development & Environment at the University of Arizona. Scott is an interdisciplinary scholar focusing on water, energy and food policy. His research and engagement address the policy dimensions of global change (climate change and urban growth) with particular emphasis on water and energy security, climate adaptation, urban wastewater and water reuse, agricultural-urban water transfers and transboundary water resources. He has lived and worked in South Asia and Latin America. Scott received PhD and MS degrees from Cornell University.