Reclaiming Indigenous Planning as a Pathway to Local Water Security

Access to drinkable water is essential to human life. The consequence of unsafe drinking water can be damaging to communities and catastrophic to human health. Today, one in five First Nation communities in Canada is on a boil water advisory, with some advisories lasting over 10 years. Factors contr...

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Published in:Water
Main Authors: Robert J. Patrick, Kellie Grant, Lalita Bharadwaj
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/w11050936
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2073-4441/11/5/936/ 2023-08-20T04:06:33+02:00 Reclaiming Indigenous Planning as a Pathway to Local Water Security Robert J. Patrick Kellie Grant Lalita Bharadwaj agris 2019-05-03 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/w11050936 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Water Use and Scarcity https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w11050936 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Water; Volume 11; Issue 5; Pages: 936 water security Canada Saskatchewan First Nations drinking water source water protection planning colonization Text 2019 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/w11050936 2023-07-31T22:14:45Z Access to drinkable water is essential to human life. The consequence of unsafe drinking water can be damaging to communities and catastrophic to human health. Today, one in five First Nation communities in Canada is on a boil water advisory, with some advisories lasting over 10 years. Factors contributing to this problem stretch back to colonial structures and institutional arrangement that reproduce woefully inadequate community drinking water systems. Notwithstanding these challenges, First Nation communities remain diligent, adaptive, and innovative in their efforts to provide drinkable water to their community members. One example is through the practice of source water protection planning. Source water is untreated water from groundwater or surface water that supplies drinking water for human consumption. Source water protection is operationalized through land and water planning activities aimed at reducing the risk of contamination from entering a public drinking water supply. Here, we introduce a source water protection planning process at Muskowekwan First Nation, Treaty 4, Saskatchewan. The planning process followed a community-based participatory approach guided by trust, respect, and reciprocity between community members and university researchers. Community members identified threats to the drinking water source followed by restorative land management actions to reduce those threats. The result of this process produced much more than a planning document but engaged multiple community members in a process of empowerment and self-determination. The process of plan-making produced many unintended results including human–land connectivity, reconnection with the water spirit, as well as the reclaiming of indigenous planning. Source water protection planning may not correct all the current water system inadequacies that exist on many First Nations, but it will empower communities to take action to protect their drinking water sources for future generations as a pathway to local water security. Text First Nations MDPI Open Access Publishing Canada Water 11 5 936
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic water security
Canada
Saskatchewan
First Nations
drinking water
source water protection planning
colonization
spellingShingle water security
Canada
Saskatchewan
First Nations
drinking water
source water protection planning
colonization
Robert J. Patrick
Kellie Grant
Lalita Bharadwaj
Reclaiming Indigenous Planning as a Pathway to Local Water Security
topic_facet water security
Canada
Saskatchewan
First Nations
drinking water
source water protection planning
colonization
description Access to drinkable water is essential to human life. The consequence of unsafe drinking water can be damaging to communities and catastrophic to human health. Today, one in five First Nation communities in Canada is on a boil water advisory, with some advisories lasting over 10 years. Factors contributing to this problem stretch back to colonial structures and institutional arrangement that reproduce woefully inadequate community drinking water systems. Notwithstanding these challenges, First Nation communities remain diligent, adaptive, and innovative in their efforts to provide drinkable water to their community members. One example is through the practice of source water protection planning. Source water is untreated water from groundwater or surface water that supplies drinking water for human consumption. Source water protection is operationalized through land and water planning activities aimed at reducing the risk of contamination from entering a public drinking water supply. Here, we introduce a source water protection planning process at Muskowekwan First Nation, Treaty 4, Saskatchewan. The planning process followed a community-based participatory approach guided by trust, respect, and reciprocity between community members and university researchers. Community members identified threats to the drinking water source followed by restorative land management actions to reduce those threats. The result of this process produced much more than a planning document but engaged multiple community members in a process of empowerment and self-determination. The process of plan-making produced many unintended results including human–land connectivity, reconnection with the water spirit, as well as the reclaiming of indigenous planning. Source water protection planning may not correct all the current water system inadequacies that exist on many First Nations, but it will empower communities to take action to protect their drinking water sources for future generations as a pathway to local water security.
format Text
author Robert J. Patrick
Kellie Grant
Lalita Bharadwaj
author_facet Robert J. Patrick
Kellie Grant
Lalita Bharadwaj
author_sort Robert J. Patrick
title Reclaiming Indigenous Planning as a Pathway to Local Water Security
title_short Reclaiming Indigenous Planning as a Pathway to Local Water Security
title_full Reclaiming Indigenous Planning as a Pathway to Local Water Security
title_fullStr Reclaiming Indigenous Planning as a Pathway to Local Water Security
title_full_unstemmed Reclaiming Indigenous Planning as a Pathway to Local Water Security
title_sort reclaiming indigenous planning as a pathway to local water security
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2019
url https://doi.org/10.3390/w11050936
op_coverage agris
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Water; Volume 11; Issue 5; Pages: 936
op_relation Water Use and Scarcity
https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/w11050936
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/w11050936
container_title Water
container_volume 11
container_issue 5
container_start_page 936
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