Water and Women: A Collective Vision for the Future

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Schuster-Wallace, C. et al. (2016). Water and Women: A Collective Vision for the Future. Solutions 7(6): 10-14. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/article/water-and-women-a-collective-vision-for-the-future/

Envisioning

Water and Women: A Collective Vision for the Future

by Corinne J. Schuster-Wallace, Susan Watt, Dennis Willms, Mariam Ali, Alice Bouman-Dentener, Jean Chamberlain, Jo-Anne Geere, Ania Grobicki, Diana S. Karanja, Rose Kawere, Maria Mutagamba, Eve Nakabembe, Sarah Nakalembe, Ross M. Pink, Virginia Roaf, Robertetta Rose, and Robert W. Sandford

This article is part of a regular section in Solutions in which the author is challenged to envision a future society in which all the right changes have been made.

A

lmost 25 years ago, women  and men gathered in Dublin, Ireland, for an international conference on water and the environment. The Dublin Statement on Water and Sustainable Development agreed upon at this event was a pivotal document six months before Rio and the Earth Summit.1 The Dublin Statement provided the first official recognition of women as central to “the provision, management, and safeguarding of water” (Principle 3). Participants of the Dublin conference started us on our current path towards realizing the complex and critical linkages between water and women. Most recently, through the Water for Life Decade,2 this path has led to Agenda 2030 (the Sustainable Development Goals), which includes global goals on both gender equality (SDG Goal 5) and water and sanitation (SDG Goal 6).3 This publication draws attention and clarity to the linkages between gender equality and water and sanitation. The contents of this special issue have been brought together, using different perspectives, to highlight the progress, solutions, and remaining challenges that exist at the interfaces between women and water since the Dublin Statement. Contributors have provided innovations in policy, human rights, the

monitoring, collection, and storage of water, meeting water, sanitation, and hygiene needs, and the valuing of water for reasons beyond its economic purpose. We now, as a collective, envision the future of women and water. Each of our authors responded to the following queries: • In 2041 (25 years from now), in relation to women and water, I think that water will… • In 2041 (25 years from now), in relation to women and water, I believe that women will… • In 2041 (25 years from now), within the context of women, my hope for water is… • In 2041 (25 years from now), I wish that women’s relationship with water will be…

• Water is valued for its social, health, and cultural aspects and not simply as an economic good; • Participatory, evidence-based action is the norm and not the exception; • Policies, practice, and research are mutually reinforcing and informing; • There is respect for and incorporation of local and traditional knowledge; • Gender disaggregated data demonstrate equity, for example, in levels of access to water and sanitation; and, • Access to water and sanitation is guaranteed and affordable for all and water is valued according to its economic, health, social, and cultural worth.

Water is now seen as a life-sustaining link for women, and women as a sustaining link for water, precipitating a shift from water carriers and fetchers to water stewards and managers. The following reflects their responses as our shared vision of a future in which solutions for women and water continue to improve this essential interface.

Women and Water in 2041 Now that it is 2041, our collective efforts have produced a dramatic transformation in the relationship between water and women:

10  |  Solutions  |  November-December 2016  |  www.thesolutionsjournal.org

We now see a future emerging where a focus on women’s relationship to water has catalyzed change (Figure 1). However, this future is set against a backdrop of climate change which, if unchecked and not urgently dealt with by governments and the international community, will result in severely reduced water resources for large populations. As such, water scarcity and inequities in access will be a


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