Dr Sonia Hoque

Senior Research Associate in Water Security and Society

Academic Profile

Sonia Ferdous Hoque is an environmental social scientist, currently working as a Senior Research Associate in Water Security and Society for the REACH programme. She leads the 'Water Society Interactions and Sustainable Development' module and co-leads the 'Research Design and Skills' module of the MSc in Water Science, Policy and Management at SoGE. She also co-leads the 'Water Inequalities, Sustainability and Enterprise' module of the MSc in Sustainability, Enterprise and the Environment at the Smith School of Enterprise and Environment.

Drawing on theories of human-environment interactions, Sonia's research focuses on the nature, drivers and distribution of water risks related to drinking water services in rural areas and small towns in Bangladesh, Ethiopia and Kenya, as well as urban river pollution linked to the global fashion industry. She is particularly interested in exploring the socio-spatial inequalities in people's water use behaviour and decision-making through water diary methods, direct observations, and intra-household surveys.

Sonia is part of the core leadership team of the 'SafePani' model - a collaboration between the REACH programme at Oxford, the Government of Bangladesh, UNICEF and HYSAWA to reform the institutional design, financing and information systems on rural drinking water services in Bangladesh. The programme seeks to drive scalable impacts to improve water availability and safety in schools, communities, and healthcare centres.

Sonia's PhD research at the University of Leeds (2016) explored the differential livelihood adaptation to social-ecological change in coastal Bangladesh. She has an MSc in Environmental Management (2011) from the National University of Singapore (NUS) and a BSc in Environmental Science (2009) from North South University, Dhaka. Sonia received the Shell Gold Medal and Prize and the Chancellor's Gold Medal for being the most outstanding student of her masters and bachelors cohort respectively.

Prior to joining her PhD program, Sonia worked as a Research Associate at the Institute of Water Policy (IWP), NUS (2011 - 2013), where her research focused on the roles of private and public sector in urban water governance and water tariffs in urban domestic and non-domestic sectors.

Research Grant

Principal Investigator. Piloting an Affordability methodology in coastal Bangladesh. Research England Internal Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) (£45k), University of Oxford, UK, Aug 2019 - Dec 2020.

Watch Sonia speak about her 2019 paper, 'A social-ecological analysis of drinking water risks in coastal Bangladesh'.

Watch Sonia discuss her water diary study in Bangladesh, which examined the affordability of drinking water services for 120 households.

Selected Publications

Hoque, S. (2021) International Journal of Water Resources Development, 39(1), pp. 89–112.
1190558 - Socio-spatial and seasonal dynamics of small, priv...
Grasham, C. et al. (2021) npj Clean Water, 4(1).
1189707 - Engaging with the politics of climate resilience t...
Roman, O. et al. (2021) Water Resources Research, 57(8).
1187000 - Optimizing rural drinking water supply infrastruct...
Hope, R. et al. (2021) REACH Working Papers. University of Oxford.
2018943 - Policy reform for safe drinking water service deli...
Hope, R. et al. (2021). University of Oxford.
2032406 - Policy reform for safe drinking water service deli...
Hoque, S. et al. (2021) ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 3(9).
1202654 - River pollution and social inequalities in Dhaka, ...
Fischer, A. et al. (2020) Global Environmental Change, 65.
1132612 - Risky responsibilities for rural drinking water in...
Hoque, S. and Hope, R. (2019) Water Economics and Policy, 6(3).
1069532 - Examining the economics of affordability through w...
Hoque, S. et al. (2019) Science of the Total Environment, 679, pp. 23–34.
998351 - A social-ecological analysis of drinking water ris...
Hoque, S. and Hope, R. (2018) Water Policy, 20(4), p. wp2018179.
930914 - The water diary method ? proof-of-concept and poli...