Abstract

Communities across the United States face a widespread water crisis including risks of contamination, rate increases, shut-offs for non-payment, and dilapidating infrastructure. Against this background, a right to water movement has emerged which has found its strength in coalition-building and collectivity. Activists demand change using the framing of “water is a human right”, socially constructing the right to water from below. Based on more than 25 semi-structured interviews with water advocates and activists, our article explores how movement participants used the human rights framework to advocate for clean and affordable water for all. We used political opportunity theory and conceptions of government “openness” and “closedness” to examine when and how advocates decided to use confrontational and cooperative approaches. We identified a push and pull of different strategies in three key spaces: in the courts, on the streets, and at the Capitols. Advocates used adversarial approaches including protests and civil disobedience, reliance on human rights mechanisms, and to a more limited extent litigation simultaneously with cooperative approaches such as engaging with legislators and the development of concrete proposals and plans for ensuring water affordability. This adaptiveness, persistence, and ability to identify opportunities likely explains the movement’s initial successes in addressing the water crisis.

Highlights

  • Accepted: 8 December 2021Communities across the United States face risks of water contamination, rate increases, shut-offs, and dilapidating infrastructure—resulting in a widespread water crisis

  • As we explored in a companion paper, it seems perplexing that activists relied on the human right to water in a country that still challenges the need for socio-economic rights

  • The interviews in 2018 were conducted face-to-face in the respective communities, while the interviews in 2020 were conducted online. They focused on engagement in human right to water advocacy, how activists utilized the framework of human rights, the reasoning for using the framework, and why and how they chose specific strategies of engagement

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Summary

Introduction

Communities across the United States face risks of water contamination, rate increases, shut-offs, and dilapidating infrastructure—resulting in a widespread water crisis. Against this background of multiple, overlapping water quality and affordability crises in communities across the country, we see more and more civil society actors use the framing of “water is a human right” to demand change Making this claim can seem a curious trend, considering the U.S.’s attitude towards domestic human rights and socioeconomic rights, in particular. Bernie Sanders and Representative Brenda Lawrence co-authored an op-ed for The Guardian seeking to bring access to water to the forefront of political discourse They explicitly stated that water is a human right [21]. As we explored in a companion paper, it seems perplexing that activists relied on the human right to water in a country that still challenges the need for socio-economic rights. The article examines how activists and advocates participated in both confrontational and cooperative advocacy approaches in the courts, on the streets, and at the Capitols on local, state and national levels

Methods
The Social Construction of the Right to Water from Below
Situating Strategic Choices for Right to Water Advocacy within
Domestic Rights-Based Litigation
Engagement with International and Regional Human Rights Mechanisms
The Streets
The Capitols
Lobbying and Legislation
Governmental Engagement
Findings
Conclusions and Outlook
Full Text
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