Foreword - Joke Muylwijk
Introduction: Achieving the Desired Gender Outcome in Water and
Sanitation - Anjal Prakash, Aidan Cronin and Pradeep K Mehta
I: CONCEPTUAL UNDERPINNING
Accelerating Gender Outcomes: The WASH Sector - Sunetra Lala,
Malika Basu, Jyotsna and Aidan Cronin
Women and Water: Vulnerability from water shortages - Yusuf Kabir,
Niranjan Vedantam and M Dinesh Kumar
Crossing Boundaries: Gender and IWRM in Education and Research -
Anjal Prakash and Chanda Gurung Goodrich
Gender and WASH: Capacity-building Initiatives - Swati Sinha
II: CASE STUDIES: WATER
Gender Issues in Watershed Management - Suhas P Wani , K H Anantha,
T K Sreedevi
Gender and Governance: A Case of Jalswarajya Project - Aditya
Bastola
Unleashing the Gender Differentials in Water Management: The Rural
Milieu - Pradeep K Mehta and Niti Saxena
The High Fluoride Burden and Tribal Women: Occurrence and Remedy -
Tapas Chakma, Gregor von Medeazza, Sanjay Singh and Pradeep
Meshram
Women’s Voice in Water Resource Management - K A S Mani, Vallaperla
Paul Raja Rao, Madhukar Reddy and Ch. Ram Babu
Leadership and Participation: Role of Gender - Sudhir Prasad,
Satyabrata Acharya and Somnath Basu
III: CASE STUDIES: SANITATION
Enabling Gendered Environment for Watershed Management - Eshwer
Kale and Dipak Zade
Women-led Total Sanitation: Saving Lives and Dignity - Gregor von
Medeazza, Megha Jain, Ajit Tiwari, Janardan Prasad Shukla and
Nisheet Kumar
Innovative Approaches in Communication - Ajit K. Saxena, Shailesh
Mujumdar and Gregor von Medeazza
Liberty from Shame: Accelerating Sanitation with ASHAs - Amit
Mehrotra and Ajay Singh
IV: CONCLUSION
Conclusions and Way Forward - Aidan Cronin, Anjal Prakash and
Pradeep K Mehta
Index
Aidan A. Cronin trained as a civil and environmental engineer and
holds a PhD in Water Resources from Queens University, Belfast. He
has worked in consultancy and then as a Senior Research Fellow at
the Robens Centre for Public and Environmental Health, University
of Surrey, UK, where he spent five years researching the impact of
anthropogenic activities on water quality in the EU and developing
country settings. He then worked as a water and sanitation advisor
at the United Nation High Commissioner for Refugees in their Public
Health Section in Geneva, Switzerland, before joining UNICEF India
in 2008. He managed the UNICEF water and sanitation programme in
Odisha, India, up to September 2010 when he joined the New Delhi
office as the water advisor. His research interests are in
understanding the impact and contribution (health, nutrition,
economic and social) of WASH provision and the processes needed to
achieve these.
Pradeep K. Mehta is Group Leader, Rural Research Centre, S M Sehgal
Foundation, Gurgaon, India. He holds a PhD in Economics from Mysore
University through the Institute for Social and Economic Change
(ISEC), Bangalore; an MPhil in Planning and Development from Indian
Institute of Technology (IIT), Bombay; and M.A. and B.A. degrees in
Economics (honours) from Punjab University, Chandigarh. A
development specialist, he has over eight years of experience in
teaching and research. His areas of expertise are rural
development, agriculture, climate change gender, water and impact
evaluation.
Anjal Prakash is the Executive Director at SaciWATERs, South Asia
Consortium for
Interdisciplinary Water Resources Studies based at Hyderabad in
Southern India.
He is also the Project Director of ‘Water Security in Peri-Urban
South Asia,’
a project funded by IDRC. He has worked extensively on the issues
of groundwater
management, gender, natural resource management, and water supply
and sanitation.
Having an advanced degree from Tata Institute of Social Sciences
(TISS), Mumbai,
India, and PhD in Social and Environmental Sciences from Wageningen
University,
the Netherlands, Dr Prakash has been working in the area of policy
research, advocacy,
capacity building, knowledge development, networking and
implementation of large-scale
environmental development projects. Before joining SaciWATERs, Dr
Prakash worked
with the policy team of WaterAid India, New Delhi, where he handled
research and
implementation of projects related to Integrated Water Resources
Management (IWRM).
Dr Prakash is the author of The Dark Zone: Groundwater Irrigation,
Politics and
Social Power in North Gujarat, published by Orient Longman. His
recent edited
books are Interlacing Water and Health: Case Studies from South
Asia (2012) by
SAGE Publications and Water Resources Policies in South Asia (2013)
by Routledge.
He is presently co-editing books on case studies of IWRM and
Peri-Urban Water
Security Issues to be published by Routledge and Oxford University
Press, respectively.
A new compendium on women's relationship with water and sanitation exposes a series of harsh realities...that deal with the tricky and highly important subject of water and sanitation - and a welcome addition to the body of work available to practitioners...Gender Issues in Water and Sanitation Programmes, covers broad concepts - water and sanitation and their relationship with women. -- The Business Line An excellent documentation of work on gender relations in the water and sanitation sectors... Shares various field experiences and fills the knowledge gap...It is good suggestive book for practitioners, students, academics, policy makers and all those with an interest in water, sanitation and hygiene sector. By reading the book, an individual develops knowledge... It is informative and readability is smooth...The style of presentation is good...It is a good resource book and has great relevance to development functionaries working in water, sanitation and hygiene. -- Journal of Rural Development, July- September 2015
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