WUNRN
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Water is sustaining human life and many human activities.
Deteriorating water quality, increasing frequency and intensity of floods pose
major challenges to societies. Changing seasonal and regional rainfall patterns
will influence the availability of water resources.
The impacts of climate change on water resources and the water
cycle as well as the availability of water in sufficient quantity and quality
will have wide-ranging effects on societies, on public health, economic
activities and the environment.
Gendered roles and responsibilities play a central role in water
provision and management. In developing countries, women are primarily
responsible for water for household use, while men are seen as
responsible for water use in business related activities like
agriculture or livestock farming. Nevertheless, in large parts of the world
women use water for subsistence agriculture and small livestock rearing as well
as for productive work and home industries.
Water scarcity as well as heavy rainfalls and more frequent
floods lead to increasing additional burdens for women. They have to
spend additional time collecting water, cleaning and maintaining their houses
after floods and caring for their families. In order to provide water for their
households and subsistence agriculture, women often have to walk long
distances, carrying heavy weights. For example, in
According to the World Health Organization 80 percent of all illnesses
in the world are attributable to unsafe water and sanitation. Water-borne diseases
kill millions of people every year, many more are sickened with diarrhoea,
malaria, hepatitis and other diseases because of the absence of clean
sanitation facilities. The lack of female-only toilets impedes girls from
school attandance in some regoins. Women’s reproductive functions make their
immune systems more susceptible to contamination, which means that their health
may be impaired more severely than that of men.
In many cases, access to water is linked to land rights
while in many parts of the world women’s right to own or inherit land is
prohibited or restricted. If women do have access to land, the plot is often
poor quality soil or does not provide sufficient access to irrigation.
Water is a public good and a basic requirement for life on
Earth. Due to climate change clean water will become more scarce. Privatisation
may add further pressure to a just water distribution. Low-income households,
particularly those headed by women, struggle to pay large lump sums for water
connections and additional monthly payments. Therefore, women have been central
in the struggle against the sale of public water services to transnational
companies.
Water scarcity is increasingly becoming a trigger for conflicts.
The growing number of conflicts and wars leads to increasing numbers of
displaced people and refugees, the majority of which are women and children.
The loss of land and water sources causes even more insecurity among refugees,
and puts an extra burden on women. Securing access to land and safe water are
major challenges for the resettlement of women refugees and their families.
Moreover, most violent conflicts aggravate the existing unequal opportunities
for access to water.
Although women manage most of households water issues and have
important knowledge and experience in saving water they are seldom consulted
and their needs are less considered. Like studies of water supply governance
shown, the whole gender dimension is excluded in debates on participation
schemes and policies. Because of the significant gender differences in use,
access and management of water, women’s participation is essential for
successful water management and adaptation planning.