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Politicizing and economizing – domestic water charges in Ireland – from a free public service, to pay-by-volume, and back again
by
Feeney, Orla
, Quinn, Martin
in
Cultural factors
/ Documentary evidence
/ Economic factors
/ Fees & charges
/ Government
/ Imposition
/ Infrastructure
/ Investments
/ Natural resources
/ Political factors
/ Politics
/ Protest movements
/ Resource management
/ Suspension
/ Sustainability
/ Sustainable development
/ Water resources management
/ Water shortages
/ Water supply
/ Water utilities
2024
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Politicizing and economizing – domestic water charges in Ireland – from a free public service, to pay-by-volume, and back again
by
Feeney, Orla
, Quinn, Martin
in
Cultural factors
/ Documentary evidence
/ Economic factors
/ Fees & charges
/ Government
/ Imposition
/ Infrastructure
/ Investments
/ Natural resources
/ Political factors
/ Politics
/ Protest movements
/ Resource management
/ Suspension
/ Sustainability
/ Sustainable development
/ Water resources management
/ Water shortages
/ Water supply
/ Water utilities
2024
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Do you wish to request the book?
Politicizing and economizing – domestic water charges in Ireland – from a free public service, to pay-by-volume, and back again
by
Feeney, Orla
, Quinn, Martin
in
Cultural factors
/ Documentary evidence
/ Economic factors
/ Fees & charges
/ Government
/ Imposition
/ Infrastructure
/ Investments
/ Natural resources
/ Political factors
/ Politics
/ Protest movements
/ Resource management
/ Suspension
/ Sustainability
/ Sustainable development
/ Water resources management
/ Water shortages
/ Water supply
/ Water utilities
2024
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Politicizing and economizing – domestic water charges in Ireland – from a free public service, to pay-by-volume, and back again
Journal Article
Politicizing and economizing – domestic water charges in Ireland – from a free public service, to pay-by-volume, and back again
2024
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Overview
Purpose
This paper aims to explore why a country with significant under-investment in water infrastructure has not successfully imposed domestic water charges. Drawing on an economization lens, it examines how an economy emerged in the imposition of water charges but was subsequently hidden due to their politically motivated suspension.
Design/methodology/approach
Drawing on documentary evidence, a theoretically informed examination of the “economization” process is set out. This examination recognizes the central role sustainability plays in water management but illustrates how sustainability must be integrated with environmental, social, economic, cultural and political factors.
Findings
The findings set out the challenges experienced by a state-owned water company as they attempt to manage domestic water charges. The paper reveals that while the suspension of water charges has hidden the “economy” within government subvention, the economic and sustainable imperative to invest in and pay for water remains, but is enveloped within a political “hot potato” bringing about a quasi-political/quasi-economic landscape.
Practical implications
The findings demonstrate how the effective and sustainable management of domestic water supply requires collaboration between multiple participants, including the government, the European Union, private citizens and the water protest movement.
Social implications
While highlighting the challenges faced by a country that has seriously under-invested in its water resources, the paper reflects the societal consequences of charging individuals for water, raising important questions about what water actually is – a right, a product or a political object.
Originality/value
Showing how an economy around domestic water supply in Ireland was revealed, but subsequently hidden in “the political”, the paper illustrates how sustainability is as much about economics and politics as it is about ecological balance and natural resources.
Publisher
Emerald Publishing Limited,Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Subject
/ Politics
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