Working toward sustainable water and wastewater infrastructure in the US–Mexico border region: a perspective on BECC and NADBank. Int. J. Water Resour. Dev. 16, 691–708 (2000). Article Google Scholar Larson, J. Informality, Illegality, and Inequality. Yale Law Policy Rev. 20, 137–...
city’s only operating body, the Water System of Mexico City (SACMEX) total supply. The objective of this work is to measure the inequality in the distribution of drinking water and water subsidies between households connected to the public network of CDMX in order to generate objective ...
Although these drivers occur simultaneously, we simulate them separately to perform a scenario-based analysis of the relative impacts that each driver might have on the city’s water balance. Figure 4 shows that the most unsustainable scenario is the one that foresees an increase of inequality and...
The sinking of parts of Mexico City into the former lake bed on which much of it is built is well documented, but to what extent does subsidence also affect other Mexican cities?Estell Chaussard and her co-authors considered this question in their article entitled “Magnitude and extent of ...
in a broader population, while the Environmental Kuznets Curve has been explained as a lag-time in technological innovations and regulation changes to cope with environmental degradation. Analogously, we expect to see an inverted U-shaped curve between household water security and its inequality ...
If the CC is below the equality line, there is greater access to safe drinking water for the richest households (if CC is upper the equity line indicates greater access in the poorest household). ECI was used to measure the magnitude of inequality of access to safe drinking water. This ...
The world faces multiple water crises, including overextraction, flooding, ecosystem degradation and inequitable safe water access. Insufficient funding and ineffective implementation impede progress in water access, while, in part, a misdiagnosis of the causes has prioritized some responses over others (...
Governing the gaps in water governance and land-use planning in a megacity: the example of hydrological risk in Mexico City Cities, 0–1 (2018), 10.1016/j.cities.2018.06.009 Google Scholar Li et al., 2015 E. Li, J. Endter-Wada, S. Li Characterizing and contextualizing the water challeng...
contribution has seldom relied on approaches rooted in the social sciences. This begs a critical question regarding the current situation: given the broadly acknowledged fact that social sciences could (and some say, should) have played a greater role in these debates and that power and inequality...
Constraints of the input–output model can be represented as Inequality 3, which ensure the demand for each product not exceeding the production amount. $$\mathop {\sum}\limits_s^{14} {\mathop {\sum}\limits_j^{16} {a_{ij}^{rs}x_j^r} } + \mathop {\sum}\limits_s^{14} {y_...