Academic Publication

Water is Life: Developing Community Participation for Clean Water in Rural South Africa

Author:
Jennifer Hove, et. al
Source:
BMJ Global Health
Contributor:
Publication Year:
2019
May 04, 2020
  • SDG 6 - Clean Water and Sanitation

This study argues that there is great interest among local community members to support water security efforts by international organizations. The article also highlights some institutional forces that are at work in local communities, such as delegations that support water security initiatives in these rural communities.

Background:

South Africa is a semiarid country where 5 million people, mainly in rural areas, lack access to water. Despite legislative and policy commitments to the right to water, cooperative governance and public participation, many authorities lack the means to engage with and respond to community needs. The objectives were to develop local knowledge on health priorities in a rural province as part of a programme developing community evidence for policy and planning.

Methods:

We engaged 24 participants across three villages in the Agincourt Health and Socio-Demographic Surveillance System and co-designed the study. This paper reports on lack of clean, safe water, which was nominated in one village (n=8 participants) and in which women of reproductive age were nominated as a group whose voices are excluded from attention to the issue. On this basis, additional participants were recruited (n=8). We then held a series of consensus-building workshops to develop accounts of the problem and actions to address it using photovoice to document lived realities. Thematic analysis of narrative and visual data was performed. 

Results:

Repeated and prolonged periods when piped water is unavailable were reported, as was unreliable infrastructure, inadequate service delivery, empty reservoirs and poor supply exacerbated by droughts. Interconnected social, behavioural and health impacts were documented combined with lack of understanding, cooperation and trust between communities and authorities. There was unanimity among participants for taps in houses as an overarching goal and strategies to build an evidence base for planning and advocacy were developed.

Conclusion:

In this setting, there is willingness among community stakeholders to improve water security and there are existing community assemblies to support this. Health and Socio-Demographic Surveillance Systems provide important opportunities to routinely connect communities opportunities to routinely connect communities to resource management and service delivery. Developing learning platforms with government and non-government organizations may offer a means to enable more effective public participation in decentralized water governance.

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