Bottled Water Use On the Land: Economic, Social and Policy Implications of Water Consumption Choices While Pursuing Livelihoods and Undertaking Recreational Activities

Defensive expenditures on bottled water for home use are related to: incomes, aesthetics (taste, convenience) and health risk perceptions (Dupont and Jahan, 2010; Lloyd-Smith et al., 2014). The previous literature is silent on two issues of relevance to WEPGN’s mandate of improving understanding of...

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Main Authors: Dupont, Diane, Adamowicz, Vic, Spetch, Marcia, Parlee, Brenda
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10464/14374
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spelling ftbrockuniv:oai:dr.library.brocku.ca:10464/14374 2023-07-16T04:00:12+02:00 Bottled Water Use On the Land: Economic, Social and Policy Implications of Water Consumption Choices While Pursuing Livelihoods and Undertaking Recreational Activities Dupont, Diane Adamowicz, Vic Spetch, Marcia Parlee, Brenda 2019-07-26T18:54:32Z http://hdl.handle.net/10464/14374 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10464/14374 Attribution-NoDerivs 2.5 Canada http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/2.5/ca/ WEPGN Project Description Bottled Water Policy Water Consumption Other 2019 ftbrockuniv 2023-06-27T22:10:13Z Defensive expenditures on bottled water for home use are related to: incomes, aesthetics (taste, convenience) and health risk perceptions (Dupont and Jahan, 2010; Lloyd-Smith et al., 2014). The previous literature is silent on two issues of relevance to WEPGN’s mandate of improving understanding of water’s role in Canadian society and economy. The first issue is identifying what are the determinants of water consumption choices on the land (particularly, water used in pursuit of livelihoods and/or recreational activities that require travel from home, including trapping, hunting and fishing practices). The second is an investigation of water choices and health risk perceptions of individuals in Canada’s Northern communities. Nickels et al., (2006) notes the use of bottled water by Aboriginal peoples as a substitute for streams/rivers due to perceptions of poor water quality. Project partners are interested in learning whether this is an increasing phenomenon in the Northwest Territories (NWT). This is of concern for two reasons: such expenditures may be wasteful for individuals and also result in potential pollution. The research team will design and implement a survey to elicit perceptions and relate them to defensive expenditures. Researchers will also examine methods for communicating and eliciting risk perceptions to provide the project partners with knowledge to improve communications about water quality. This research will inform decisions around programming, specifically, source water protection planning. Other/Unknown Material Northwest Territories Brock University Digital Repository Northwest Territories
institution Open Polar
collection Brock University Digital Repository
op_collection_id ftbrockuniv
language English
topic WEPGN
Project Description
Bottled Water
Policy
Water Consumption
spellingShingle WEPGN
Project Description
Bottled Water
Policy
Water Consumption
Dupont, Diane
Adamowicz, Vic
Spetch, Marcia
Parlee, Brenda
Bottled Water Use On the Land: Economic, Social and Policy Implications of Water Consumption Choices While Pursuing Livelihoods and Undertaking Recreational Activities
topic_facet WEPGN
Project Description
Bottled Water
Policy
Water Consumption
description Defensive expenditures on bottled water for home use are related to: incomes, aesthetics (taste, convenience) and health risk perceptions (Dupont and Jahan, 2010; Lloyd-Smith et al., 2014). The previous literature is silent on two issues of relevance to WEPGN’s mandate of improving understanding of water’s role in Canadian society and economy. The first issue is identifying what are the determinants of water consumption choices on the land (particularly, water used in pursuit of livelihoods and/or recreational activities that require travel from home, including trapping, hunting and fishing practices). The second is an investigation of water choices and health risk perceptions of individuals in Canada’s Northern communities. Nickels et al., (2006) notes the use of bottled water by Aboriginal peoples as a substitute for streams/rivers due to perceptions of poor water quality. Project partners are interested in learning whether this is an increasing phenomenon in the Northwest Territories (NWT). This is of concern for two reasons: such expenditures may be wasteful for individuals and also result in potential pollution. The research team will design and implement a survey to elicit perceptions and relate them to defensive expenditures. Researchers will also examine methods for communicating and eliciting risk perceptions to provide the project partners with knowledge to improve communications about water quality. This research will inform decisions around programming, specifically, source water protection planning.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Dupont, Diane
Adamowicz, Vic
Spetch, Marcia
Parlee, Brenda
author_facet Dupont, Diane
Adamowicz, Vic
Spetch, Marcia
Parlee, Brenda
author_sort Dupont, Diane
title Bottled Water Use On the Land: Economic, Social and Policy Implications of Water Consumption Choices While Pursuing Livelihoods and Undertaking Recreational Activities
title_short Bottled Water Use On the Land: Economic, Social and Policy Implications of Water Consumption Choices While Pursuing Livelihoods and Undertaking Recreational Activities
title_full Bottled Water Use On the Land: Economic, Social and Policy Implications of Water Consumption Choices While Pursuing Livelihoods and Undertaking Recreational Activities
title_fullStr Bottled Water Use On the Land: Economic, Social and Policy Implications of Water Consumption Choices While Pursuing Livelihoods and Undertaking Recreational Activities
title_full_unstemmed Bottled Water Use On the Land: Economic, Social and Policy Implications of Water Consumption Choices While Pursuing Livelihoods and Undertaking Recreational Activities
title_sort bottled water use on the land: economic, social and policy implications of water consumption choices while pursuing livelihoods and undertaking recreational activities
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10464/14374
geographic Northwest Territories
geographic_facet Northwest Territories
genre Northwest Territories
genre_facet Northwest Territories
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10464/14374
op_rights Attribution-NoDerivs 2.5 Canada
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/2.5/ca/
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