What influences women’s participation in water governance? Learning from polder zones of Bangladesh

Coastal regions of Bangladesh face severe climate-related water challenges, with disproportionate impacts on women due to entrenched gender inequalities in access to resources, mobility, and decision-making. This study examines the extent and quality of women’s participation in Water Management Grou...

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Main Authors: Singaraju, Niyati, Sarker, Mou Rani, Akter, Rima, Das, Mohanambrota, Batas, Mary Ann, Mondal, Manoranjan K., Puskur, Ranjitha, Yadav, Sudhir
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Informa UK Limited 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175740
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author Singaraju, Niyati
Sarker, Mou Rani
Akter, Rima
Das, Mohanambrota
Batas, Mary Ann
Mondal, Manoranjan K.
Puskur, Ranjitha
Yadav, Sudhir
author_browse Akter, Rima
Batas, Mary Ann
Das, Mohanambrota
Mondal, Manoranjan K.
Puskur, Ranjitha
Sarker, Mou Rani
Singaraju, Niyati
Yadav, Sudhir
author_facet Singaraju, Niyati
Sarker, Mou Rani
Akter, Rima
Das, Mohanambrota
Batas, Mary Ann
Mondal, Manoranjan K.
Puskur, Ranjitha
Yadav, Sudhir
author_sort Singaraju, Niyati
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Coastal regions of Bangladesh face severe climate-related water challenges, with disproportionate impacts on women due to entrenched gender inequalities in access to resources, mobility, and decision-making. This study examines the extent and quality of women’s participation in Water Management Groups (WMGs) across four coastal polders using a mixed-methods approach. Quantitative findings show that women’s membership is shaped by social norms, domestic roles, institutional dynamics, and access to resources, while men’s is driven mainly by production benefits. Moreover, women’s membership is further influenced by their social identity. Gender quotas have improved women’s formal representation, but decision-making within WMGs remains male-dominated, particularly in water infrastructure and financial planning. Qualitative insights highlight that restrictive social norms and intra-household power dynamics often render women’s participation symbolic. Leadership positions are still held overwhelmingly by men. Over 80% of women reported that membership improved their access to information and enhanced their recognition and voice in household decision-making. Yet, meaningful engagement remains limited without targeted efforts to challenge the structural and normative constraints that shape gendered exclusions. The study calls for gender-transformative approaches to water governance that move beyond quotas to strengthen women’s agency, voice, and leadership in water resource management.
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spelling CGSpace1757402025-11-12T04:58:18Z What influences women’s participation in water governance? Learning from polder zones of Bangladesh Singaraju, Niyati Sarker, Mou Rani Akter, Rima Das, Mohanambrota Batas, Mary Ann Mondal, Manoranjan K. Puskur, Ranjitha Yadav, Sudhir women participation decision making gender-transformative approaches climate change water resources water mangament gender equality community involvement Coastal regions of Bangladesh face severe climate-related water challenges, with disproportionate impacts on women due to entrenched gender inequalities in access to resources, mobility, and decision-making. This study examines the extent and quality of women’s participation in Water Management Groups (WMGs) across four coastal polders using a mixed-methods approach. Quantitative findings show that women’s membership is shaped by social norms, domestic roles, institutional dynamics, and access to resources, while men’s is driven mainly by production benefits. Moreover, women’s membership is further influenced by their social identity. Gender quotas have improved women’s formal representation, but decision-making within WMGs remains male-dominated, particularly in water infrastructure and financial planning. Qualitative insights highlight that restrictive social norms and intra-household power dynamics often render women’s participation symbolic. Leadership positions are still held overwhelmingly by men. Over 80% of women reported that membership improved their access to information and enhanced their recognition and voice in household decision-making. Yet, meaningful engagement remains limited without targeted efforts to challenge the structural and normative constraints that shape gendered exclusions. The study calls for gender-transformative approaches to water governance that move beyond quotas to strengthen women’s agency, voice, and leadership in water resource management. 2025-05-04 2025-07-23T05:59:05Z 2025-07-23T05:59:05Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175740 en Open Access application/pdf Informa UK Limited Singaraju, Niyati, Mou Rani Sarker, Rima Akter, Mohanambrota Das, Mary Ann Batas, Manoranjan K. Mondal, Ranjitha Puskur, and Sudhir Yadav. "What influences women’s participation in water governance? Learning from polder zones of Bangladesh." Gender, Technology and Development (2025): 1-29.
spellingShingle women participation
decision making
gender-transformative approaches
climate change
water resources
water mangament
gender equality
community involvement
Singaraju, Niyati
Sarker, Mou Rani
Akter, Rima
Das, Mohanambrota
Batas, Mary Ann
Mondal, Manoranjan K.
Puskur, Ranjitha
Yadav, Sudhir
What influences women’s participation in water governance? Learning from polder zones of Bangladesh
title What influences women’s participation in water governance? Learning from polder zones of Bangladesh
title_full What influences women’s participation in water governance? Learning from polder zones of Bangladesh
title_fullStr What influences women’s participation in water governance? Learning from polder zones of Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed What influences women’s participation in water governance? Learning from polder zones of Bangladesh
title_short What influences women’s participation in water governance? Learning from polder zones of Bangladesh
title_sort what influences women s participation in water governance learning from polder zones of bangladesh
topic women participation
decision making
gender-transformative approaches
climate change
water resources
water mangament
gender equality
community involvement
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175740
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