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Gender equality and social inclusion in community-led multiple use water services in Nepal

Author

Listed:
  • van Koppen, Barbara

    (International Water Management Institute (IWMI))

  • Raut, Manita

    (International Water Management Institute (IWMI))

  • Rajouria, Alok

    (International Water Management Institute (IWMI))

  • Khadka, Manohara

    (International Water Management Institute (IWMI))

  • Pradhan, P.
  • GC, R. K.
  • Colavito, L.
  • O’Hara, C.
  • Rautanen, S.-L.
  • Nepal, P. R.
  • Shrestha, P. K.

Abstract

The Constitution of Nepal 2015 enshrines everyone’s right of access to clean water for drinking and the right to food. The common operationalization of the right to water for drinking is providing access to infrastructure that brings water for drinking and other basic domestic uses near and at homesteads. Challenges to achieving this goal in rural areas include: low functionality of water systems; expansion of informal self supply for multiple uses; widespread de facto productive uses of water systems designed for domestic uses; growing competition for finite water resources; and male elite capture in polycentric decision-making. This paper traces how the Nepali government and nongovernmental organizations in the water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH), irrigation and other sectors have joined forces since the early 2000s to address these challenges by innovating community-led multiple use water services (MUS). The present literature review of these processes complemented by field research supported by the Water for Women Fund focuses on women in vulnerable households. Overcoming sectoral silos, these organizations support what is often seen as the sole responsibility of the WASH sector: targeting infrastructure development to bring sufficient water near and at homesteads of those left behind. Women’s priorities for using this water are respected and supported, which often includes productive uses, also at basic volumes. In line with decentralized federalism, inclusive community-led MUS planning processes build on vulnerable households’ self supply, commonly for multiple uses, and follow their priorities for local incremental infrastructure improvements. Further, community-led MUS builds on community-based arrangements for ‘sharing in’ and ‘sharing out’ the finite water resources in and under communities’ social territories. This realizes the constitutional right to food in line with the Nepal Water Resources Act, 1992, which prioritizes core minimum volumes of water for everyone’s domestic uses and many households’ irrigation. Evidence shows how the alleviation of domestic chores, women’s stronger control over food production for nutrition and income, and more sustainable infrastructure mutually reinforce each other in virtuous circles out of gendered poverty. However, the main challenge remains the inclusion of women and vulnerable households in participatory processes.

Suggested Citation

  • van Koppen, Barbara & Raut, Manita & Rajouria, Alok & Khadka, Manohara & Pradhan, P. & GC, R. K. & Colavito, L. & O’Hara, C. & Rautanen, S.-L. & Nepal, P. R. & Shrestha, P. K., 2022. "Gender equality and social inclusion in community-led multiple use water services in Nepal," IWMI Working Papers H050908, International Water Management Institute.
  • Handle: RePEc:iwt:worppr:h050908
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.5337/2022.200
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Basnet, G. & van Koppen, Barbara, 2011. "Multiple use water services in Nepal scoping study," IWMI Research Reports H045595, International Water Management Institute.
    2. Meinzen-Dick, Ruth Suseela & Pradhan, Prachanda & Zhang, Wei, 2021. "Migration and gender dynamics of irrigation governance in Nepal," IFPRI discussion papers 2061, International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI).
    3. van Koppen, Barbara & Moriarty, Patrick & Boelee, Eline, 2006. "Multiple-use water services to advance the millennium development goals," IWMI Research Reports 44523, International Water Management Institute.
    4. United Nations UN, 2015. "Transforming our World: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development," Working Papers id:7559, eSocialSciences.
    5. Raj K. GC & Ralph P. Hall & A. L. (Tom) Hammett, 2022. "Thinking beyond domestic water supply: approaches to advance multiple-use water systems (MUS) in the rural hills of Nepal," Water International, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 47(1), pages 92-113, January.
    6. Floriane Clement & Prachanda Pradhan & Barbara Van Koppen, 2019. "Understanding the non-institutionalization of a socio-technical innovation: the case of multiple-use water services (MUS) in Nepal," Water International, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 44(4), pages 408-426, May.
    7. Clement, Floriane & Pokhrel, Paras & Sherpa, Tashi Yang Chung, 2015. "Sustainability and replicability of multiple-use water systems (MUS)," IWMI Reports 208418, International Water Management Institute.
    8. Barbara van Koppen & Patrick Moriarty & Eline Boelee, 2006. "Multiple-Use Water Services to Advance the Millennium Development Goals," IWMI Research Reports H038377, International Water Management Institute.
    9. Khadka, Manohara & Uprety, Labisha & Shrestha, Gitta & Minh, Thai Thi & Nepal, Shambhawi & Raut, Manita & Dhungana, Shashwat & Shahrin, S. & Krupnik, T. J. & Schmitter, Petra, 2021. "Understanding barriers and opportunities for scaling sustainable and inclusive farmer-led irrigation development in Nepal," IWMI Books, Reports H050731, International Water Management Institute.
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