The institutional dynamics of water justice in southern coastal Bangladesh

Bangladesh is the seventh most climate-vulnerable country, and the impacts of this are largely shaped by waterrelated challenges in this deltaic country. The gendered dimensions of these challenges are poorly understood and addressed in technical interventions designed to mitigate and enable adaptat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sarker, Mou Rani, Joshi, Deepa
Format: Poster
Language:Inglés
Published: International Rice Research Institute 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/137031
Description
Summary:Bangladesh is the seventh most climate-vulnerable country, and the impacts of this are largely shaped by waterrelated challenges in this deltaic country. The gendered dimensions of these challenges are poorly understood and addressed in technical interventions designed to mitigate and enable adaptation to climate impacts. A focus on gender (read ‘women’) is often limited to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) interventions or, at best, extends to women’s representation in irrigation wateruser associations. These interventions fail to address the complexity of interlinked domestic and productive water challenges, as well as deep-rooted masculinities in the institutional dynamics of managing water crises. In this presentation, we discuss a water-justice framework that combines quantitative and qualitative methods to understand how intersectional gendered inequalities impact water governance and climate resilience. This includes exploring how the structures and cultures of formal and informal institutions shape masculinities in water access, availability and control. In this panel, we will discuss an analytical framework that allows exploring the multiple drivers—sociocultural, economic, political, and institutional that perpetuate structural and gendered water inequalities from household to policy levels. Addressing transformative water justice as the framework will demonstrate requires paying attention to these complexities, as well as to intersectional disparities that crosscut gendered inequalities.