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Gender issues in water resources management

Date post: 31-Dec-2015
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Gender issues in water resources management . . .towards a vision of Equity and Sustainability. Water has become a strategic resource. Its control is a source of power A key to economic development and A trigger to socio-political stress - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Gender issues in water Gender issues in water resources management resources management . . .towards a vision of . . .towards a vision of Equity and Sustainability Equity and Sustainability
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Page 1: Gender issues in water resources management

Gender issues in water Gender issues in water resources managementresources management

. . .towards a vision of Equity and . . .towards a vision of Equity and SustainabilitySustainability

Page 2: Gender issues in water resources management

Water has become a strategic resource. . .

• Its control is a source of power

• A key to economic development and

• A trigger to socio-political stress

Improved management of water is imperative to sustainable development,poverty alleviation and biodiversity preservation

Page 3: Gender issues in water resources management

“…..women are not a special interest group in water and sanitation,they are a mainstream interest group….without their involvement,projects risk being inappropriate,and failing.”

Why gender ?Why gender ?

Page 4: Gender issues in water resources management

What is gender ?What is gender ?

Relative status of men and women society

Page 5: Gender issues in water resources management

Gender Role – Reproductive,productive, community managing role & community politics role.

Triple roleTriple role

Page 6: Gender issues in water resources management

The Gender GapThe Gender Gap

BeneficiaryBeneficiaryParticipationParticipation

Gender AnalysisGender Analysis

Planning & Evaluation Planning & Evaluation (including logframe)(including logframe)

Page 7: Gender issues in water resources management

Gender analysis

• Seeing what our eyes have been trained not to see.

• Access & control- men &women have on resources.

Why ?• To Ensure services needed by men &

women in a sustainable manner and are appropriate to their circumstances.

Page 8: Gender issues in water resources management

Participatory exercises & tools for gender analysis

• Access to resources

• Task analysis & role flexibility by gender

• Women’s lives:needs assessments

• Gender analysis of poverty

• Evaluation of gender diff. In decision making

Page 9: Gender issues in water resources management

Change ProcessChange Process

Resistance to change

Change through intervention

Management of theresistance to change

How and wherewe want to be

Expected reality

How and where weare

Perceived reality

Actual situation Future situation

Page 10: Gender issues in water resources management

Women’s water roles

• Provision of water for fulfillment of fundamental human needs

• Family hygiene is in their hands• Cooking ,washing,cleaning etc.,• Hauling water and storage• Crop production• Livestock management

women not passive users but active managers of . . community water supply

Page 11: Gender issues in water resources management

Women’s economic contribution

• Produce 80% of food in poorest parts of the world.(some places 95%)

First produce water• Spend 8 hours finding,collecting,storing and

purifying water.• Negotiate with others for access to

water,evaluate water sources,analyse supply patterns and lobby relevant authorities and launch protests when availability is threatened

Page 12: Gender issues in water resources management

Critiques the notion of participationWho participates in projects and why?

Are the needs of men and women known and/or

responded to?

Is there a complementary or competing agenda

among beneficiaries?

Have participants had input into project

monitoring and evaluation?

Discussions with women as separate group and

with men.

Page 13: Gender issues in water resources management

Why a gender approach ?

Black holes in the practice of community participation

• Community not a collection of equal people• Communities contain competing interest

groups• Water is for life & is also an economic

resource. Power issues place women in

a . . disadvantaged position

Page 14: Gender issues in water resources management

Gender approach highlights…

• The differences between men and women’s interest

• The conventions and hierarchies in society

• The differences among men and women based on age,ethnic background and other factors

• The way gender roles and differences change

Page 15: Gender issues in water resources management

Women – OUT of Modern Management Picture

BEFORE• WRM – part of unpaid, informal

economy,governed by traditional norms,women are responsible .

NOW• Once it enters public domain,it becomes

subject to hierarchical rules –men are planners,managers & decision makers and women carry out the decisions.

Page 16: Gender issues in water resources management

Situation of Women today

• Women are overburdened by the double responsibilities of House hold & Economic effort

• Cultural bias against participation in decision making bodies

• Patriarchal relations also express themselves in control of land rights

• Patriarchal patterns (attitudes) also among official decision making at all levels.

Page 17: Gender issues in water resources management

Situation cont’d

• Women lack skills relevant to participation (poor literacy level )

• Women often lack technical skills

• Women are absent from,managerial engineering and policy making levels of society

Page 18: Gender issues in water resources management

Sustainable Water management

• Technical sustainability: user involvement in the choice of appropriate and affordable technology

• Social sustainability : user recognition of the benefits of water resource provisions through stakeholder participation and gender sensitive approaches

Page 19: Gender issues in water resources management

SWM. . .Cont’d

• Financial sustainability : user management of financial resources

• Environmental sustainability : user resource management

• Institutional sustainability : user involvement as stakeholders in devolved power,capacity building and local autonomy.

Page 20: Gender issues in water resources management

Gender mainstreaming

. . .the process of assessing the implications for women and men of any planned action,including legislation policies or programs, in all areas at all levels.

It is a strategy for making women’s as well as men’s concerns and experiences as integral dimension of the design,implementation,monitoring and evaluation of policies and programs in all political,economic and societal spheres so that women and men benefit equally.

Page 21: Gender issues in water resources management

10 lessons on Gender

• Gender is central concern in water & sanitation

• Ensuring both women’s and men’s participation improves project performance

• Specific simple mechanisms must be created to ensure women’s involvement

• Attention to gender needs as soon as possible

• Gender analysis is integral to project identification and data collection

Page 22: Gender issues in water resources management

Lessons cont’d• A learning approach is more gender responsive

than blue print approach• Projects are more effective when both women

and men’s preferences about hardware are addressed

• Women and men promote project goals through both their traditional and non-traditional roles

• NGOs and especially women’s group can facilitate gender balanced approach

• Gender related indicators should be included when assessing project performances

Page 23: Gender issues in water resources management

Mainstreaming gender in WRMAt national level• Gender perspectives in the water sector to be

recognised in all policies and programmes• Legal frameworks and institutional reforms to

incorporate gender considerations• Building capacity increase the understanding of

gender implications for water management• A proactive effort to gender sensitise water

management approaches at national policy making levels to ensure equity

• Gender training for men and women working in water related bodies at all levels

Page 24: Gender issues in water resources management

Gender in WRM Cont’d

• Policy changes so that gender becomes an intrinsic part of national WRM strategy

At the project/local /community level• Gender stratification in research and planning• In-depth gender-sensitive consultation

processes that allow participation of both in decision making

• Ensuring gender balanced participation in management at all levels

Page 25: Gender issues in water resources management

Gender in WRM Cont’d

• Capacity building of women to perform all managerial functions

• Gender training for both women and men at local level

• Capacity building to equip women to perform technical functions

• Strategies to ensure that both women and men share the benefits of changes in water supply management

Page 26: Gender issues in water resources management

Benefits of gendered WRM

• Greater effectiveness

• Greater efficiency

• Better development

• Greater equity

• Sustainable use in water eco-systems

Page 27: Gender issues in water resources management

Benefits to the society,environment and water sector

• Economic

• Nutrition and health

• Social

• Environmental

• Financial

• Cultural

Page 28: Gender issues in water resources management

Thank you

Gains of Gender approach

• Efficiency• Effectiveness• Equity• Affordability

P AmudhaProject officer,Unicef


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