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Updated: Tuesday 18 December 2007

Women's Collective Action and Sustainable Water Management

Smita Mishra Panda (2007)

CAPRi Working Paper 61: Women's collective Action and Sustainable Water Management. Case of SEWA's Water Campaign in Gujarat, India.

This paper discusses the Self Employed Women's Association's (SEWA) Women, Water and Work Campaign which organises women's collective action in Gujarat, India to sustain local water management. Some of the significant factors that have sustained women's collective action are the presence of strong grassroots institutions, the establishment of a technical cadre of women, the ability of women's groups to transcend social barriers and continuous dialoguing with the state. Women have benefited in terms of increased income, reduced drug\dgery, improvements in the livelihoods of their families, reduced migration of both women and men and increased participation in SEWA's other programmes. The most important impact observed is the strenghtening of women's collective agency and women's confidence to independently negotiate in the public domain in the water management sector, which was earlier occupied by men. Women's collective agency has catalyzed some gender-equitable change processes at the household level among SEWA leaders but the impacts are not yet widespread.

Link: CAPRi website

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capriwp61.pdf  (346 kB)


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