1. Water-poverty relationships in the coastal town of Mbour (Senegal): Relevance of GIS for decision support
- Author
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Valentin Nedeff, Vincent Turmine, Jean-François Noël, Néné Makoya Toure, Gabriel Lazar, Alioune Kane, Centre d'études sur la mondialisation, les conflits, les territoires et les vulnérabilités (Cemotev), Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ), and The paper was written during the research stage financed by Romanian Government through the 'Eugen Ionescu' scholarship.
- Subjects
Decision support system ,Resource (biology) ,Population ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Water supply ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Social issues ,01 natural sciences ,Coastline ,[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences ,Environmental protection ,Sustainable development ,11. Sustainability ,Computers in Earth Sciences ,education ,Environmental planning ,Poverty ,Integrated management ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Global and Planetary Change ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Fresh water ,Corporate governance ,1. No poverty ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Gis ,6. Clean water ,Geography ,business - Abstract
International audience; Coastal area is always a zone with complex problems. Due to the attraction they exert, are facing many social problems. Therefore, a coastal city is usually a city with problems. Its extension, caused by the influx of people from different backgrounds, creates an increased demand for services. One of the problems frequently encountered, especially in Senegal, is access to water. The problem of access to water is poorly treated, without being correlated with the urban evolution, i.e. with increasing population and demand growth. The water resource is facing numerous complications such as the lack of integrated management, integration issues at the governance level, where the local factor is often forgotten. The town of Mbour, object of our study, does not come out of that lot, being an attractive coastal city, from an African country. This indicates the need for an integrated management oriented from local to a global basis and not vice versa. The study presented in this paper indicates that a large proportion of the population has not access to a verified drinking water system and uses water from wells or standpipes. Half of the surveyed population (50%) has no access to a water supply system. The water poverty map of the town overlaps with that of the general poverty excepting few neighborhoods. This means that even areas that are not affected by poverty have a very low or poor access to water, which so far remains the perverse effect of the reform of the Senegalese water sector in 1995.
- Published
- 2012