Decentralised drinking water regulation: Risks, benefits and the hunt for equality in the Canadian context

被引:0
|
作者
Harvard University, 401 Park Drive, Boston [1 ]
MA
02215, United States
不详 [2 ]
QC
H3G 1M8, Canada
机构
来源
Int. J. Water | / 2卷 / 178-193期
关键词
Water management - Risk management - Environmental regulations - Quality control - Decision making - Risk assessment - Water quality - Potable water;
D O I
10.1504/IJW.2015.068960
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Drinking water management in Canada is based on the intervention of provinces and territories. This contrasts with the American and European approach of uniform, legally enforced regulation at the federal or super-federal level. The Canadian model has been widely criticised for the unequal level of regulation between provinces and territories and the passive role taken by the federal government. This paper: 1) puts calls for greater centralisation in the context of Canada's social and political climate; 2) reviews government, academic and environmental advocacy literature on competing drinking water regulation paradigms; 3) evaluates strengths and weaknesses of centralised and decentralised frameworks for drinking water regulation in the context of risk management theory and practical challenges. Notably, we evaluate drinking water decision-making as one of many competing opportunities for public spending on risk abatement and posit that increasing the uniformity of drinking water quality does not necessarily increase overall equality. Copyright © 2015 Inderscience Enterprises Ltd.
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