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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2018 Nov 1.
Published in final edited form as: Water Secur. 2017 Nov 16;2:1–10. doi: 10.1016/j.wasec.2017.09.001

Table 1.

Advancing methods for assessing entitlements and capabilities as dimensions of household water insecurity

HWI Concept Market-based Entitlements Non-market Entitlements Human capabilities
Common methods Economic methods, such as those discussed in “Water Affordability” section Acquisition data, recorded using observational & interview methods; Descriptive and statistical analysis Measures of HWI impacts on health and basic goods; education and literacy; mental and physical capabilities
Purpose or use of common methods Widely used, though data limitations often lead to measurement at higher levels of aggregation Describes and quantifies non-market water acquisition (e.g., reciprocal exchange & common-pool institutions) Quantifies 3 aspects of capabilities (health, education, mental/physical) in cross-cultural context
Is the household (HH) typically the unit of analysis? Yes. Also common at higher levels. Yes, typically the household head reports on HH data. Individual or household. Data can be aggregated to HH.
Recommended HWI approaches & methods that need further development Broader assessments of the monetary cost of water, including opportunity costs and physical risks Better conceptual definition of the range of non-market exchanges used to acquire water Conceptual definition & measures to assess less-documented and poorly-understood dimensions of HWI impacts on capabilities
Why new approaches or methods are needed To estimate more accurately the economic cost of water and how it contributes to HWI To develop a valid & comprehensive framework for categorizing or quantifying non-market water entitlements To assess the other dimensions of HWI & capabilities in ways that are valid for cross-cultural contexts & comparisons