Beyond Quotas: Women in Water Governance

The polder zones of Bangladesh are home to about nine million people. The majority of this population is engaged in the agricultural sector. Women play a crucial role in agriculture and food systems, and their involvement in farm production and management is growing with increasing male out-migratio...

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Main Authors: Sarker, Mou Rani, Batas, Mary Ann, Singaraju, Niyati, Akter, Rima, Das, Mahanambrota, Mondal, Manoranjan K., Puskur, Ranjitha, Yadav, Sudhir
Format: Libro
Language:Inglés
Bengali
Published: International Rice Research Institute 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139800
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author Sarker, Mou Rani
Batas, Mary Ann
Singaraju, Niyati
Akter, Rima
Das, Mahanambrota
Mondal, Manoranjan K.
Puskur, Ranjitha
Yadav, Sudhir
author_browse Akter, Rima
Batas, Mary Ann
Das, Mahanambrota
Mondal, Manoranjan K.
Puskur, Ranjitha
Sarker, Mou Rani
Singaraju, Niyati
Yadav, Sudhir
author_facet Sarker, Mou Rani
Batas, Mary Ann
Singaraju, Niyati
Akter, Rima
Das, Mahanambrota
Mondal, Manoranjan K.
Puskur, Ranjitha
Yadav, Sudhir
author_sort Sarker, Mou Rani
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The polder zones of Bangladesh are home to about nine million people. The majority of this population is engaged in the agricultural sector. Women play a crucial role in agriculture and food systems, and their involvement in farm production and management is growing with increasing male out-migration. But effective water management poses a huge challenge due to tidal hydrology, salinity, waterlogging, and climate stresses such as cyclones and droughts. In response to the water challenges, the government of Bangladesh implemented a community governance approach in the early 1990s by establishing Water Management Groups (WMGs). In the policy, the executive committee of the WMGs must include 30% women members. The primary goal was to promote user participation in decision-making process in water management. Women need water for agricultural production and postproduction, but their participation in water governance has been undermined. Formal structures, including quotas, have an increased representation of women in WMGs. But effective participation in water management decision-making is restricted by cultural norms, time poverty, limited information access and constraints in land and financial access. Women’s participation in water governance has positive outcomes on water management, agricultural productivity, and livelihoods. To promote effective women’s participation in water governance in polder zones, a holistic approach is needed, encompassing: • Gender-sensitive campaigns • Recognition & redistribution of unpaid work • Equal land access • Control over income • Training and capacity-building
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Bengali
publishDate 2024
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spelling CGSpace1398002024-11-07T09:35:54Z Beyond Quotas: Women in Water Governance Sarker, Mou Rani Batas, Mary Ann Singaraju, Niyati Akter, Rima Das, Mahanambrota Mondal, Manoranjan K. Puskur, Ranjitha Yadav, Sudhir climate change food security gender water governance The polder zones of Bangladesh are home to about nine million people. The majority of this population is engaged in the agricultural sector. Women play a crucial role in agriculture and food systems, and their involvement in farm production and management is growing with increasing male out-migration. But effective water management poses a huge challenge due to tidal hydrology, salinity, waterlogging, and climate stresses such as cyclones and droughts. In response to the water challenges, the government of Bangladesh implemented a community governance approach in the early 1990s by establishing Water Management Groups (WMGs). In the policy, the executive committee of the WMGs must include 30% women members. The primary goal was to promote user participation in decision-making process in water management. Women need water for agricultural production and postproduction, but their participation in water governance has been undermined. Formal structures, including quotas, have an increased representation of women in WMGs. But effective participation in water management decision-making is restricted by cultural norms, time poverty, limited information access and constraints in land and financial access. Women’s participation in water governance has positive outcomes on water management, agricultural productivity, and livelihoods. To promote effective women’s participation in water governance in polder zones, a holistic approach is needed, encompassing: • Gender-sensitive campaigns • Recognition & redistribution of unpaid work • Equal land access • Control over income • Training and capacity-building 2024-02 2024-03-04T17:01:58Z 2024-03-04T17:01:58Z Book https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139800 en bn Open Access application/pdf application/pdf International Rice Research Institute Citation: Sarker, M.R., Batas, M.A., Singaraju, N., Akhter, R., Dash, M., Mondal, M., Puskur, R. and Yadav, S. (2024). Beyond Quotas: Women in Water Governance. International Rice Research Institute, Dhaka, Bangladesh. 12P.
spellingShingle climate change
food security
gender
water governance
Sarker, Mou Rani
Batas, Mary Ann
Singaraju, Niyati
Akter, Rima
Das, Mahanambrota
Mondal, Manoranjan K.
Puskur, Ranjitha
Yadav, Sudhir
Beyond Quotas: Women in Water Governance
title Beyond Quotas: Women in Water Governance
title_full Beyond Quotas: Women in Water Governance
title_fullStr Beyond Quotas: Women in Water Governance
title_full_unstemmed Beyond Quotas: Women in Water Governance
title_short Beyond Quotas: Women in Water Governance
title_sort beyond quotas women in water governance
topic climate change
food security
gender
water governance
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139800
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