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Resilient Water and Wastewater Infrastructure Systems through Integrated Humanitarian-Development Processes: The Case of Lebanon's Protracted Refugee Crisis. | LitMetric

Resilient Water and Wastewater Infrastructure Systems through Integrated Humanitarian-Development Processes: The Case of Lebanon's Protracted Refugee Crisis.

Environ Sci Technol

Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, 301 East Dean Keaton Street C1752, Austin, Texas 78712, United States.

Published: May 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • When populations are displaced due to disasters, water and wastewater utilities struggle to provide services, particularly if local infrastructure was already under strain.
  • The paper offers an integrated approach to create resilient water and wastewater systems that bridge the gap between humanitarian response and long-term development (referred to as the humanitarian-development nexus).
  • Through interviews with municipalities in Lebanon, the study identifies challenges across physical, social, financial, and institutional aspects, suggesting policy areas like utility pricing to enhance infrastructure resilience and contribute to sustainable development.

Article Abstract

When populations are displaced, say after a hurricane or a man-made crisis, water and wastewater utilities can face a real challenge in providing services to those displaced. The challenge is especially difficult when the local infrastructure was already strained in trying to meet the host community's pre-displacement demand. What most communities need are resilient water and wastewater infrastructure systems, and what we develop in this paper is an integrated approach that can achieve such systems. Our approach takes into account the operating environment of bridging what some call the humanitarian-development (HD) nexus. The HD nexus is the phase in which a community transitions toward a response paradigm that combines humanitarian response with long-term services. The HD nexus poses inherent contextual challenges, and we identify them, through interviews with municipalities in Lebanon, in their physical, social, financial, and institutional dimensions. Furthermore, we explore interactions that can inform how best to address these challenges. Our results introduce policy areas (i.e., utility pricing and establishing shared development priorities) that support this transition across the HD nexus and achieve resilient systems. Our discussions give rise to an empirical understanding of the infrastructures' operating environments and thus contribute to global conversations on sustainable development.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.0c05630DOI Listing

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