ABSTRACT
This handbook provides a comprehensive overview of the field of gender and water governance, exploring how the use, management and knowledge of water resources, services and the water environment are deeply gendered.
In water there is a recognized gender gap between water responsibilities and water rights and bridging this gap is likely to help achieve not just goals of equity but also those of sustainability. Building on a rich legacy of feminist water scholarship, the Routledge Handbook of Gender and Water Governance is a collection of reflections and studies that can be used as a prismatic lens into a thriving and ever proliferating array of feminist water studies. It provides a clear testimony of how hydrofeminism has evolved from rather instrumental gender and water studies to scholarship that uses feminist tools to pry open, critically reflect on and formulate alternatives to water development-as-usual. The book also shows how the community of feminists interested in studying water has diversified and expanded, from often white female scholars studying projects and gender relations in the so-called Global South, to a varied mix of scholars and activists theorizing from diverse geographical and political locations – prominently including the body. It is organized into five interconnected parts:
- Part I: Positionality and embodied waters
- Part II: Revisiting water debates: diplomacy, security, justice and heritage
- Part III: Sanitation stories
- Part IV: Precarious livelihoods
- Part V: New feminist futures
Each of these parts brings out the gendered nature of water, shedding light on the often neglected care and unpaid labour of women and its relationship with extractivism and socioeconomic inequalities. The overall aim of the handbook is to apply social science insights to water governance challenges, creating synergies and linkages between different disciplines and scientific domains.
The Routledge Handbook of Gender and Water Governance is essential reading for students, scholars and professionals interested in water governance, water security, health and sanitation, gender studies and sustainable development more broadly.
The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part 1|87 pages
Positionality and embodied waters
chapter 1|7 pages
Women's Anti-Hydropower Activism in Turkey
chapter 2|16 pages
Making Engineers Tell Their Stories? Masculinity, Whiteness and Heteronormativity “At Work” In Life History Interviews in Irrigation in Nepal
chapter 4|17 pages
Mapping Water Care Practices
chapter 5|10 pages
Women's Bodily Experiences
chapter 6|9 pages
Embodying the Urban Political Ecology of Water
chapter 7|10 pages
The Temporal Fragility of Water Infrastructure
part 2|97 pages
Revisiting water debates
chapter 9|15 pages
Toxic Homes, Toxic Water
chapter 12|12 pages
Peace, Power, Participation
chapter 13|15 pages
New Spaces for Water Justice? Groundwater Extraction and Changing Gendered Subjectivities in Morocco's Saïss Region
part 3|71 pages
Sanitation stories
chapter 15|12 pages
The Contentious Path of Menstrual Health
chapter 16|19 pages
The Many Meanings of Menstruation
chapter 17|13 pages
Access to Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene for All
chapter 18|10 pages
Harvest of Uterus
part 4|76 pages
Precarious livelihoods
chapter 20|17 pages
Water Reuse Irrigation, Gender, and Poverty Inequalities in Kafr El Sheikh, Egypt
chapter 24|14 pages
Domesticity, Masculinities and Femininities
part 5|59 pages
New feminist futures
