The Water Challenge: Global North and Global South
A recurrent issue in the drinking water management of countries in the Global South is the lack of cooperation between stakeholders, gaps of knowledge in policy documents, ineffective enforcement strategies and finally low quality data collection on surface and groundwater condition. Linked to the disconnection of different scales to bring awareness at grass root level implementation, water pollution remains a growing challenge in need of intersectional collaboration to achieve a comprehensive management system (Awoke 2016, Ongley 1994). In order to tackle such problem statement recurrent in the Global South, an interesting application is given by the self-governance of water pollution as a common. Specifically through the individual treatment of rural water pollution (ITRWP), positive health impacts have been reported on the populations. To achieve an equitable health outcome regardless of socioeconomic status, policy alignment must be coordinated at all scales: the government must pr...