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Engaging with Gender in Water Governance and Practice in Kenya

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Water Security Across the Gender Divide

Part of the book series: Water Security in a New World ((WSEC))

Abstract

How water is distributed, who has access and can make decisions on its use depends on various social, structural and institutional factors, among them gender. This paper examines the extent to which water–related policies and plans of the Kenyan government engage with gender. It analyses how the framing conditions set by the policies and plans affect the management of community water groups in Laikipia, and assesses whether the community water groups through their activities reduce gender inequality in access to water and in decision making about water-use. It uses a gender analytical framework that identifies three levels of engagement, whereby engagement occurs in a continuum: (1) gender mainstreaming, (2) the experience of gender in terms of addressing practical and strategic gender needs, and (3) the degrees of action to reduce gender inequality. We find that the Kenyan public policy has institutionalised various measures to reduce gender inequality, a major strategy being to limit the representation of either men or women to two-thirds in any governance arrangement. This means a 30% minimum representation of women. This top-down structural measure has permeated government ministries, departments and agencies and has become a precondition for government practice and interventions, including the water sector. By being an obligation, it is transformative in that it changes the way governance has been conducted prior to the policy change and serves as a benchmark for practice within and outside government. Bound by the water governance arrangements of the government, most community water groups have had to adopt the “two-thirds gender rule”. This policy measure has thus trickled down to local water governance. However, achieving strategic gender goals remains a challenge, highlighting how gender mainstreaming is inadequate to completely reduce gender inequality. Additional efforts are needed to change socio-cultural beliefs and norms to support a more gender-equitable access to water. Furthermore, an analysis of the community water groups highlight that financial capability may be a stronger factor than gender in determining men and women’s access to water in Laikipia, Kenya. Thus in addition to addressing socio-cultural beliefs and norms, there is a need to explore the intersections of gender and capabilities, and the roles they play in reducing gender inequality in water use and governance.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    Drawing on literature, Ridgeway and Correll (2004, 510) refer to gender as “an institutionalised system of social practices for constituting people as two significantly different categories of men and women, and organising social relations of inequality on the basis of that difference”. A gender system “... involves cultural beliefs and distribution of resources at the macro level, patterns of behaviour and organisational practices at the interactional level, and selves and identities at the individual level” (p. 501–502).

  2. 2.

    Gramsci’s concept of cultural hegemony addresses the relation between culture and power under capitalism (Jackson Lears 1985, 568), and “refers to a historical process in which a dominant group exercises ‘moral and intellectual leadership’ throughout society by winning the voluntary ‘consent’ of popular masses” (Kim 2001, 742).

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Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to the Volkswagen Foundation for funding this study in the framework of the research project on ‘Semi-Arid Areas in Transition’ under the programme ‘Knowledge for Tomorrow – Cooperative Research Projects in Sub-Saharan Africa’ [grant number I/83732]. We would also like to thank CETRAD staff for the support and logistics, especially during data collection. We thank Roger Cremades, Timothy Adams and the two anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments and suggestions.

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Correspondence to Chinwe Ifejika Speranza .

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Annex 7.1 Results from the Analysis of Kenya Government Policies, Acts, Bills and Plans

Annex 7.1 Results from the Analysis of Kenya Government Policies, Acts, Bills and Plans

  

Scores on engaging with gender

   

No.

Kenya government policies and plans

Gender mainstreaming

Experiences of gender

Degree of action

Total

Score

1

The Constitution of Kenya (2010)

2

3

2

7

2

Kenya Vision (2030)

2

3

1

6

3

Water policy (1999)

3

1

3

7

4

The Water Resources Management (WRM) rules (2007)

2

0

0

6

5

IWRM & WE Plan (2009)

3

3

3

9

6

WRMA SP(2012-17)

0

3

3

6

7

Water Bill (2014)

1

0

0

1

8

National irrigation policy draft (2015)

1

0

0

1

9

Water Act (2016)

3

1

1

5

10

Kenya land policy (2007)

3

3

2

8

11

Land Act (2012)

1

0

0

1

12

National environ. policy (2013)

3

1

2

6

13

Agriculture Act (2013)

3

0

2

5

14

Kenya forest policy (2014)

3

1

3

7

15

Kenya NCCRS (2010)

2

1

3

6

16

Climate change bill (2014)

3

0

3

6

17

Climate Change Act (2016)

3

1

2

6

18

Community Land Act (2016)

1

1

0

2

19

Fisheries Mngt. and Dev. Act (2016)

3

1

3

7

  1. High: 7–9 points; Moderate: 4–6 points; Low 0–3 points

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Ifejika Speranza, C., Bikketi, E. (2018). Engaging with Gender in Water Governance and Practice in Kenya. In: Fröhlich, C., Gioli, G., Cremades, R., Myrttinen, H. (eds) Water Security Across the Gender Divide. Water Security in a New World. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-64046-4_7

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