Socio-environmental monitoring and ...
Document type :
Compte-rendu et recension critique d'ouvrage
Title :
Socio-environmental monitoring and co-management strategies to favor groundwater recharge and sustainable use in southern metropolises: Toward a co-managed aquifer recharge model?
Author(s) :
Bertrand, Guillaume [Auteur correspondant]
Laboratoire Chrono-environnement (UMR 6249) [LCE]
Cary, Paul [Auteur]
Centre de Recherche "Individus Epreuves Sociétés" - ULR 3589 [CeRIES]
Cary, Lise [Auteur]
Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières [BRGM]
Hirata, Ricardo [Auteur]
Universidade de São Paulo = University of São Paulo [USP]
Petelet-Giraud, Emmanuelle [Auteur]
Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières [BRGM]
Steinmann, Marc [Auteur]
Laboratoire Chrono-environnement (UMR 6249) [LCE]
Coelho, Victor [Auteur]
Universidade Federal da Paraiba / Federal University of Paraiba [UFPB]
Montenegro, Suzana [Auteur]
Federal University of Pernambuco [Recife]
Paiva, Anderson [Auteur]
Federal University of Pernambuco [Recife]
Almeida, Cristiano [Auteur]
Universidade Federal da Paraiba / Federal University of Paraiba [UFPB]
Laboratoire Chrono-environnement (UMR 6249) [LCE]
Cary, Paul [Auteur]
Centre de Recherche "Individus Epreuves Sociétés" - ULR 3589 [CeRIES]
Cary, Lise [Auteur]
Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières [BRGM]
Hirata, Ricardo [Auteur]
Universidade de São Paulo = University of São Paulo [USP]
Petelet-Giraud, Emmanuelle [Auteur]
Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières [BRGM]
Steinmann, Marc [Auteur]
Laboratoire Chrono-environnement (UMR 6249) [LCE]
Coelho, Victor [Auteur]
Universidade Federal da Paraiba / Federal University of Paraiba [UFPB]
Montenegro, Suzana [Auteur]
Federal University of Pernambuco [Recife]
Paiva, Anderson [Auteur]
Federal University of Pernambuco [Recife]
Almeida, Cristiano [Auteur]
Universidade Federal da Paraiba / Federal University of Paraiba [UFPB]
Journal title :
Current Opinion in Environmental Science & Health
Pages :
100350
Publisher :
Elsevier
Publication date :
2022-06
English keyword(s) :
Contamination
Water resource management
Critical zone
Aquifer storage and recovery
Common-pool resources
Water resource management
Critical zone
Aquifer storage and recovery
Common-pool resources
HAL domain(s) :
Planète et Univers [physics]/Sciences de la Terre
English abstract : [en]
In rapidly growing southern metropolises, climatic, anthropogenic and demographic pressures combined with centralized network deficiencies, favor individual initiatives to access freshwater, e.g., illegal well settlements, ...
Show more >In rapidly growing southern metropolises, climatic, anthropogenic and demographic pressures combined with centralized network deficiencies, favor individual initiatives to access freshwater, e.g., illegal well settlements, pirate connection to the distribution network, rainwater harvesting, and storage in tanks. These strategies are amplified by extreme meteorological events (e.g., droughts) that also trigger cognitive mechanisms, such as denial, opportunism or a kind of “myopic” competition to access the resource without considering (knowing) collateral impacts. From these environmental and social dimensions, this review first evaluates the arguments for the integration of managed aquifer recharge (MAR) in socio-environmental observatories (SEO). SEO are structures concurrently monitoring natural, anthropogenic, and engineered processes but also relationships between stakeholders/managers and end-users. Second, in order to take advantage from the current private (and illegal) strategies, MAR implementation accompanied with a SEO structure is discussed to show how it promotes cognitive, social, economic, and governance conditions required for successful co-management.Show less >
Show more >In rapidly growing southern metropolises, climatic, anthropogenic and demographic pressures combined with centralized network deficiencies, favor individual initiatives to access freshwater, e.g., illegal well settlements, pirate connection to the distribution network, rainwater harvesting, and storage in tanks. These strategies are amplified by extreme meteorological events (e.g., droughts) that also trigger cognitive mechanisms, such as denial, opportunism or a kind of “myopic” competition to access the resource without considering (knowing) collateral impacts. From these environmental and social dimensions, this review first evaluates the arguments for the integration of managed aquifer recharge (MAR) in socio-environmental observatories (SEO). SEO are structures concurrently monitoring natural, anthropogenic, and engineered processes but also relationships between stakeholders/managers and end-users. Second, in order to take advantage from the current private (and illegal) strategies, MAR implementation accompanied with a SEO structure is discussed to show how it promotes cognitive, social, economic, and governance conditions required for successful co-management.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Popular science :
Non
Source :
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