It does this in the context of the new decentralised governance structures that are based on the assumption that domestic water supply is the legitimate domain of women and thus power and authority needs to be granted to women to manage water resources.
However, there is a very little understanding of how this has benefited women and what are the challenges experienced during the process of implementation or the outcomes gained from these processes, in the context of the Indian society that continues to propogate patriarchal values and is based on structures that are inherently hierarchical and inequitable.
Some of the papers dwell on and explore the inherent biases in the literature and make an attempt to understand their implications for women in managing water resources, while some of the papers share case studies on the outcomes of the implementation of the decentralised water management policies at the village level.
Women and water: Issues of gender, caste, class and institutions
This paper by Maithreyi Krishnaraj provides an introduction to the collection of papers on Gender and Water, which examine the relationship between women and water in the context of the institutional environment of gender relations and state policy.
The paper argues that:
The experiences narrated in some of the articles demonstrate that, decentralisation of power and authority with the launching of Panchayati Raj in local communities have had varied consequences at the field level. The assignment of work related to the supply and management of domestic water among women many a times has been found to put the onus on women to be efficient without the needed technical knowledge and skills.
At the same time, a look at the implementation of community managed systems, which are a part of the romanticised traditional water management systems indicates that, claims of social equity for such practices cannot be sustained because the women as well as the dalits have been excluded from equitable sharing of such village resources.
The paper ends by arguing that:
Women and decentralised water governance: Issues, challenges and the way forward
This paper by Seema Kulkarni examines the implications of decentralised governance in water and its ability to address gender and equity issues in the context of India by analysing the case of the implementation of decentralised water governance in Maharashtra and Gujarat. The paper states that in an ideal situation, it is well understood that water is a public good and should be available, accessible and affordable to all the people in society.To enable this outcome, the nature of governance is important. Appropriate decentralisation, giving powers to local communities to manage their resources is an important avenue for achieving both equity and equality in access to this valuable resource.
However, experience indicates that, this is not the case when the process of decentralisation in distribution of water gets implemented at the ground level in the context of hierarchies in the society that control access to the resources by caste, class discriminations. In this context, women are found to suffer even more with the addition of patriarchal impositions. The success of decentralised water governance is constrained by the conceptualisation of the larger reform in water at one level and the conceptualisations of the normative woman, communities, public and the private domains and institutions at another. Unless all of these are altered, decentralised processes will not be truly democratic.
Categorical thinking about domestic water and irrigation, and men and women is commonplace now and affects how policies and programmes are shaped. Spaces are divided on what is masculine and what is feminine, the home and the outside world. However, men’s identities, are linked to the public sphere, money and power while women’s identities revolve around the home, nurture and subsistence. These identities transmit in exactly the same manner in the water sector and the sectoral divide is evidence to this.
The paper argues that:
However, the paper warns that there is a risk that the decentralisation of roles and responsibilities without the concomitant devolution of real power and resources can reduce it to a mere political objective that has little meaning for women’s representation or participation, given the inherent gender biases that prevent women from exercising voice, accessing resources or institutions.
ImageSource: Wikimedia Commons
Questioning masculinities in water
This paper by Margreet Zwarteveen directs attention at the complete absence of women's voices in the context of irrigation, in spite of the fact that gender and women have now earned a legitimate place on water research and policy agendas. The paper argues that, beginning with colonial times and continuing to the present, irrigation has been an important site for the construction of gendered power and hegemonic masculinities and the irrigation world still continues to be a "man’s world".
This manifests itself along at least three different dimensions, which are linked although not in direct causal ways:
The paper ends by arguing that the continued masculinity of irrigation is a problem that urgently requires critical investigation. Such studies will serve both as a first step to create more space for women engineers in government water agencies, and importantly contribute to unravelling important aspects of the cultural politics of water.
‘They are not of this house’: The gendered costs of drinking water’s commodification
This paper by Kathleen O'Reilly presents/describes the case of the implementation of a drinking water project in rural Rajasthan and highlights how it has led to marginalisation of women's needs and demands in a situation dominated by scarce resources. Community participation in the context of adherence to traditional norms and practices has led to consideration of girls before marriage as non contributary, non paying members of the household and as a burden to be paid for by communities, for their water needs.
In this drinking water project in rural Rajasthan, community participation involved villagers beginning to pay for water and maintaining the system inside village boundaries. Women’s participation was also a key element of the supply system sustainability plan. However, some villagers reported that households paid for the drinking water of all members, except girls.
The project intended to make people pay for water, but it resulted in an uneven landscape where in certain villages, everyone, but girls paid. Prior beliefs about girls’ belonging and non-belonging led communities to consider that girls should not pay, in the context of decentralisation, democratisation and commodification, which enabled such a decision to be taken.
Once taken, a decision that girls should not be charged for water became daily practice, thereby strengthening belief’s about the girls’ lack of community ties before marriage.Thus, it could be seen that the outcome of commodification of water and participatory governance was the reinforcement of girls’ marginalisation in their natal villages.
The paper argues that:
Caste, gender and the rhetoric of reform in India’s drinking water sector
This paper by Deepa Joshi argues that the recent changes in domestic water policies have only served to exacerbate an enduring unequal social order around water in India. Assumptions had been made in the new policy that ability and willingness to pay would reflect water needs and translate into voice and choice in water management. However, in actuality, it has been found that the policy does not fare well for the marginalised by poverty and caste in the implementation of the new approach.
This paper focuses on the complex interrelationships between gender and caste, given the historic role of these factors in defining a persisting inequality in India. The paper argues that very little attention has been paid to the complex interplays and intersections between caste, gender and water in India. Assumptions continue to be made in the sector that inequalities exist only at the household/community levels, ignoring the complex intersection of gender and caste, which serve to restrict opportunities and access to education, skills, occupations and positions for women and some men in water implementing and policy organisations.
This paper discusses the interplay of caste, gender and water using two intersecting lines of analysis, first, complex caste and gender disparities across multiple institutional levels from the household to policy making forums; and second, a consistent reproduction of these disparities as water governance and management changed hands from community to state to recent neoliberal institutional arrangements.
Primary research presented in this paper is a group of mountain villages in the state of Uttarakhand in the Central Himalayan region, known popularly as Kumaon.The research indicates that there are distinct differences in the experiences of caste and gender based inequity, even though both are outcomes of the same principles and these inequities converge in complex intersections, making disparities by caste and gender difficult to segregate.
The paper ends by arguing that:
The papers can be downloaded from below: