Julie Fisher et al final with references_160517.pdf (327.21 kB)
Download fileMainstreaming gender in the WASH sector: dilution or distillation?
journal contribution
posted on 2017-05-26, 14:40 authored by Julie Fisher, Sue Cavill, Brian ReedThe way women’s issues have been conceptualized and acted on in the context of water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) has changed over the past four decades. The discourses and trends in development studies - from the Women in Development approach of the 1970s to Gender and Development in the 1980s - were mirrored in the WASH sector. The WASH sector has contributed to, and been shaped by, debates on women’s needs and, latterly, on gender perspectives based on a combined argument for equity and efficiency. In addition, in the last decade, the WASH sector has developed its own distinctive initiatives, such as menstrual hygiene management (MHM) and recently, specific WASH considerations relating to gender-based violence (GBV). This paper assesses whether the result of this sector-specific response has been a dilution or distillation of gender issues. It concludes that the WASH sector has not disregarded the goals of women’s empowerment and gender equality; rather, it has contributed to understandings of how resources – such as infrastructure and services - underpin that empowerment. This allows an important recognition of the value and impact of WASH sector priorities and actions for the wider wellbeing of women.
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