Skip navigation

April McAlpine

Qualifications

MSc Disaster Management and Sustainable Development, Northumbria University, 2009

PhD Project (working title)

Patronage, water and women (at the margins): Cambodia’s contaminated groundwater and how poor and marginalised groups negotiate access and rights to safe water in a post-conflict, authoritarian state.

Description

Many rural Cambodians suffer from a lack of adequate, clean domestic water, commonly relying on groundwater, rainwater and surface water for their domestic water needs. This has lead to widespread rural water poverty.

This is further compounded by the fact that groundwater from the underground aquifer, once heralded as a cost-effective source of convenient, pathogen-free drinking water for rural populations, has been found to contain unsafe levels of naturally occurring heavy metals such as arsenic, fluoride and nitrate as well as agricultural and industrial pollutants. I will be researching water poverty in the Cambodian socio-political context, particually how women and marginalised ‘others’ access safe drinking water under a regime dominated by hierarchical control, patron-client relationships and the neoliberal development agenda of donor agencies. I would like to understand what such a combination does to peoples’ capabilities to access water. In such a context, is it possible to move beyond top-down aid interventions to grass-roots social movements which result in the radical transformation of power relations?

Research interests

Water poverty and marginalisation
Gender and power relations
Neoliberal development agenda
Environment and development

Publications

Jones, S. and McAlpine, A. (2009), A review of environment and development priorities for Cambodia, CALIBRE Project, The University of Manchester

Contact

april.mcalpine@northumbria.ac.uk


Latest News and Features

Images shows the logo of Northumbria University's Aerospace Medicine and Rehabilitation Laboratory
Eating Disorder Research Animation Still
Dr Henrik Melin pictured with a life-sized replica of one of the Webb telescope’s 18 individual hexagonal mirrored panels. Image credit: Barry Pells/Northumbria University.
Professor Arlene Astell
Dr David Littlefair and Dr Joanne Atkinson, Deputy and Head of Department for Social Work, Education and Community Wellbeing at Northumbria University are joined by public policy researchers, Professor Matthew Johnson, Dr Howard Reed, Dr Elliott Johnson and Dr Graham Stark.
The IDEAS-NET Team (L-R), Dr Eduwin Pakpahan, Professor Tracy Finch, Dr Sebastian Potthoff, Professor Katie Haighton, Professor Angela Bate (Co-Director), Professor Sonia Dalkin (Co-Director), Professor Joanne Gray, Professor Tom Sanders, Dr Jason Scott (Deputy Director), Professor Darren Flynn, Jamie Taylor (Project Manager)
More news
More events

Upcoming events

Back to top