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Women and Water Management
Participation of women in water planning and management is an important issue. However,
globally the discussions on women and water use and management have thus far been almost
exclusively dominated by the gender specialists. Senior women water managers and
decision-makers have generally refrained from participating in such discussions for a
variety of reasons. In order to fill this gap, The Centre
has embarked in the task of analysing the roles women play and could play in the
management and planning of water resources from the viewpoints of senior women water
managers and decision-makers at the national, regional and global levels. Specific ideas
in terms of implementable proposals on how the participation of women in the field of
water management could be increased are now urgently needed.
As a part of an overall process to address this issue comprehensively, a forum for senior
water decision-makers and professionals from the various Latin American countries was
organised so that their collective views and experiences could be ascertained. A
workshop was organised in Mexico City earlier, on the "Contributions of women to the
planning and management of water resources in Latin America." Organised with the support
of SIDA, GWP, IICA and IWMI, the workshop was primarily restricted to senior water
decision-makers and professionals from the region, who were carefully selected and
invited to participate in their personal capacities. Only about 10 percent of the
participants were gender specialists. The workshop participants noted that in Latin
America more women are currently working as decision-makers, managers, and researchers in
water-related issues than in other regions of the world. The main issue identified by the
participants was not discrimination faced by women to become senior decision-makers, as
is often repeated by the gender specialists in the past, but rather women had, for
whatever reasons, decided not to enter the engineering profession, which is an essential
prerequisite for attaining senior ranks in the water profession.
The situation in many Latin American countries are likely to change significantly during
the coming years, since the number of women undertaking engineering education has
increased dramatically in many Latin American countries during the past decade. For
example, in Panama, the percentage of female engineering students has increased from 2%
in early 1970s to 46% at present. Similarly, in Brazil, the number of women students
studying water resources engineering has increased by 40% during the past decade alone.
Current analyses indicate that this trend is likely to increase even further in the
coming years.
The Mexico City Forum was followed by a Workshop during the Stockholm Water Symposium in
August 1998 on the "Contributions of women in the field of water management". During this
Workshop, it was noted that water development and gender are two priority issues in the agendas of most international organisations. Unfortunately, however, the
gender issues for the most part are receiving lip-service: concrete operational
activities are mostly missing. GWP, a co-sponsor of both the Stockholm and Mexico
Workshops, is interested not in dogmas, but in supporting the development and
implementation of concrete project proposals on how to improve and increase the role of
women in the water sector. In spite of the specific request made by Dr. Jonch Clausen at
Stockholm, not even a single concrete proposal emerged on how to increase or improve the
participation of women in the water sector.
The book based on the specially commissioned papers of the Mexico City Workshop and its
results has been published by Oxford University Press, with Cecilia Tortajada
as the Editor. The selected peer-reviewed papers from the Stockholm Workshop have also
been published as a Special Issue (December 1998) of the International Journal of Water
Resources Development. Together, they are likely to contribute significantly to the
continuing debate in this important but complex area. The Centre also organised a special
session on professional women and water management during the Second World Water Forum
in The Hague in March 2000
With the support of InWEnt (Capacity Building International, Germany), the Centre carried
out additional research on women and water management in the Middle East and North African
countries, with main emphasis on Morocco. The results of the study on Morocco have been
published in Water International: Professional Women and Water Management: Case study from Morocco,
by cecilia Tortajada (October 2003).
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