Helderop Edward, Mack Elizabeth, Grubesic Tony H
Center for Geospatial Sciences, School of Public Policy, University of California, Riverside, USA.
Department of Geography, The Environment, and Spatial Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, USA.
GeoJournal. 2023 Mar 23:1-14. doi: 10.1007/s10708-023-10863-0.
A lack of regular access to clean and safe water and sanitation is a persistent problem in many parts of the world. Most water insecurity studies focus on the world's less-industrialized and lower-income countries, where sanitation and water delivery infrastructure may never have existed. However, many individuals in higher-income countries experience invisible water insecurity, wherein specific households or individuals lack access to sanitation and clean water despite the relative wealth of their country. In the United States, invisible water insecurity tends to manifest as a result of homelessness, a lack of plumbing facilities, and water utility shut-offs. Using a water shut-off dataset from the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department, we investigate the relationship between a suite of demographic variables and the water shut-off rates in different neighborhoods throughout Detroit, Michigan. We find that shut-offs are more common in areas with more Black households that are more impoverished. Our findings indicate that this relationship links to structural disadvantage resulting from a legacy of racism and segregation in the city.
在世界许多地区,缺乏定期获取清洁安全的水和卫生设施的途径是一个长期存在的问题。大多数水资源不安全研究都集中在世界上工业化程度较低和收入较低的国家,这些国家可能从未有过卫生和供水基础设施。然而,许多高收入国家的个人也经历着无形的水资源不安全状况,即尽管所在国家相对富裕,但特定家庭或个人却无法获得卫生设施和清洁水。在美国,无形的水资源不安全往往表现为无家可归、缺乏管道设施以及停水等情况。利用底特律水和污水处理部门的停水数据集,我们研究了一系列人口统计变量与密歇根州底特律不同社区停水率之间的关系。我们发现,在黑人家庭较多且贫困程度较高的地区,停水情况更为普遍。我们的研究结果表明,这种关系与该市种族主义和种族隔离遗留问题导致的结构性劣势有关。