GRANDE, M. H. D.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/1935895683771637; GRANDE, Maria Helena Del.
Resumo:
The aim of the current thesis is to investigate the distribution of and access to water in
Campina Grande City, based on both the objective and perceived impacts caused by the water
rationing initiated in 2014. The main idea herein defended, which is based on the theoretical
perspective of Political Ecology, is that the studied urban space configures a water injustice
situation associated with the hydraulic criterion, the income stratification, as well as with the
waterscape construction in Campina Grande. With respect to the methodology applied to the
current study, the water access difficulty and precariousness levels were monitored from the
beginning of the rationing currently under way, using intentional household samples stratified
by location and household income. The spatial contour was the urban area of Campina Grande
and the time interval comprised the period from November 2014 to June 2016. Data
concerning water shortages in the households, rationing occurrences, monthly water
consumption, impacts on water use routines as experienced and perceived by the users in the
sample, as well as sociodemographic data about the users and information about their
dwelling, household water supply, water reservation and prevention, were collected and
treated. It was possible observing several meanings attributed to the water distribution and
access issue in excerpts clipped from users' narratives about their household water use
routines, as well as about the elements of the environment they live in. The effects of some
water distribution and access determinants, the understanding of how users experience and
perceive their access to water, as well as how the water rationing affects their household
routines, were addressed and the analysis of such aspects pointed toward a water injustice
situation. The following conclusions are among the most relevant ones in the current thesis:
(1) there is unequal water distribution in the urban area of Campina Grande due to structural
water scarcity, and it more sharply reaches the households located in the high water shortage
risk areas; (2) the higher the household income, the greater the water reservation capacity, the
easier the access to water, and the lower the impact of rationing on water use routines; (3) the
poorest population strata tend to naturalize the restrictive impacts of rationing since they
experience and live in a permanent water underconsumption state.