The Global Ethnohydrology project began in 2006, imagined by Amber as a postdoc when she first came to ASU. We have a rhythm to the project, and each year we select a new topic, connect to new collaborators, and work in slightly different countries over the summer. We try to […]
In 2015, we were invited to friendly Dublin, Ireland to collaborate on a new project focusing on the social dimensions of water. At the time, Ireland was in the midst of a highly emotional political crisis, because people were outraged that the government had begun to charge households for water. […]
Climate problems may not be the top priority of the incoming US administration. But their effects are pretty darn obvious in places like Paquetequete neighborhood, in northern Mozambique, where the effects of draught, flooding, cyclones, pollution, and disease fully collide. I just got back from a fascinating visit to this and […]