The human right to drinking water and sanitation in Mexico: how to make it effective?

Autores/as

  • Antonio Cáñez Cota Research and Dialogue Consortium on Local Government, CIDIGLO

Palabras clave:

Human Right to Drinking Water and Sanitation, Mechanisms of Governance, General Law of Water, Tijuana-San Diego, Mexico

Resumen

The objective is to understand what mechanisms of governance contribute to make the human right to drinking water and sanitation effective in Mexico. The methodological strategy we used is a case study of the Tijuana- San Diego cross-border region with the purpose of comparing two different traditions of governance within one same geographical context. The main finding suggests that it is the governance framework –and not economic capability– what determines the effectiveness of water policies. Specifically, we obtained three lessons on the mechanisms of governance and three lessons for desirable objectives in new legislations. Summarizing, paying attention to the mechanisms of governance is recommended instead of arguing axiomatically in favor of this right.

Biografía del autor/a

Antonio Cáñez Cota, Research and Dialogue Consortium on Local Government, CIDIGLO

PhD in Public Policy (Escuela de Gobierno. Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey). Research Coordinator in the Research and Dialogue Consortium on Local Government (CIDIGLO). Member of the National Research System (CONACYT, México).

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Publicado

2018-12-03

Cómo citar

Cáñez Cota, A. . (2018). The human right to drinking water and sanitation in Mexico: how to make it effective? . Journal of Public Governance and Policy: Latin American Review, (4), 63-82. Recuperado a partir de https://journalofpublicgovernance.cucea.udg.mx/index.php/jpgp/article/view/7862