@article{143913ab6f36409cb31de49f1ed674b6,
title = "Governing water insecurity: navigating indigenous water rights and regulatory politics in settler colonial states",
abstract = "Indigenous peoples experience water insecurity disproportionately. There are many parallels between the injustices experienced by racialized and marginalized populations and Indigenous peoples. However, the water insecurity experienced by Indigenous peoples is distinctly shaped by settler colonialism. This article draws on examples from Canada and the United States to illustrate how jurisdictional and regulatory injustices along with the broader political and economic asymmetries advanced by settler colonial States (re-)produce water insecurity for Indigenous peoples. We conclude by engaging with how Indigenous peoples are pushing back against these arrangements using State and non-State strategies by revitalizing Indigenous knowledge and governance systems.",
keywords = "Canada, Indigenous water governance, Navajo Nation, United States, settler colonialism, sovereignty, water contamination, water insecurity",
author = "Wilson, {Nicole J.} and Teresa Montoya and Rachel Arseneault and Andrew Curley",
note = "Funding Information: This research was undertaken, in part, thanks to funding from the Canada Research Chairs Program [grant number 950-232734]. The authors are grateful for the ways our knowledge and thinking for this paper was advanced through Wilson, Arsenault and Montoya{\textquoteright}s participation in the {\textquoteleft}Water, Inequality, and Justice in Higher Income Economies{\textquoteright} roundtable panel at the American Anthropological Association meetings in Vancouver, BC; and Wilson and Arsenault{\textquoteright}s participation in the Household Water Insecurity Experiences in Higher Income Countries workshop at the University of British Columbia organized by the HWISE RCN in November 2019. Lastly, a thank you to all the community collaborators in the Navajo Nation and with Yukon and Ontario First Nations, which inform this work. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2021 International Water Resources Association.",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1080/02508060.2021.1928972",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "46",
pages = "783--801",
journal = "Water International",
issn = "0250-8060",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "6",
}