Women, Water Resource Management, and Sustainable Development: The Turkey-North Cyprus Water Pipeline Project

Women’s role in water resource management is recognized, yet the implementation of methods and strategies to get beyond gender-based obstacles to women’s equal participation in water resource management related projects remain vague. Mainstream considerations on the gender aspect...

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Main Author: Emine Eminel Sülün
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-08-01
Series:Resources
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/7/3/50
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spelling doaj-212c8b6d84934d92a61db268cc8f735b2020-11-25T02:27:08ZengMDPI AGResources2079-92762018-08-01735010.3390/resources7030050resources7030050Women, Water Resource Management, and Sustainable Development: The Turkey-North Cyprus Water Pipeline ProjectEmine Eminel Sülün0Department of International Relations, Near East University 1, 99138 Nicosia/TRNC, Mersin 10, TurkeyWomen’s role in water resource management is recognized, yet the implementation of methods and strategies to get beyond gender-based obstacles to women’s equal participation in water resource management related projects remain vague. Mainstream considerations on the gender aspects of development and environment focus on women as having an intrinsic relationship with the environment. Women are perceived as a natural reflection of their responsibilities for the household and the comfort and security of future generations. Contrary to mainstream environmental and political ecology research, this paper sees gender as relevant within policy and practice across multiple levels, and within institutions related to natural resource governance. Based on this, the paper looks at the sustainable development and water governance issues with the help of a specific case: the Turkey-North Cyprus Water Pipeline Project. Through broad reviews of project documentation, interviews with people who were directly involved with the project and with women’s organizations the paper draws insights on the gender aspect of the decision-making mechanisms related to water governance. The results indicate that participation by women in resource management is marginal in North Cyprus. The paper discusses that this is a reflection of a broader problem, which is gender inequality. In conclusion, one can argue that future water projects need to realize more sustainable outcomes and greater effects on gender equality in North Cyprus.http://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/7/3/50North Cyprusnatural resource managementgender inequalitywater governance and participatory developmentwomen’s empowerment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emine Eminel Sülün
spellingShingle Emine Eminel Sülün
Women, Water Resource Management, and Sustainable Development: The Turkey-North Cyprus Water Pipeline Project
Resources
North Cyprus
natural resource management
gender inequality
water governance and participatory development
women’s empowerment
author_facet Emine Eminel Sülün
author_sort Emine Eminel Sülün
title Women, Water Resource Management, and Sustainable Development: The Turkey-North Cyprus Water Pipeline Project
title_short Women, Water Resource Management, and Sustainable Development: The Turkey-North Cyprus Water Pipeline Project
title_full Women, Water Resource Management, and Sustainable Development: The Turkey-North Cyprus Water Pipeline Project
title_fullStr Women, Water Resource Management, and Sustainable Development: The Turkey-North Cyprus Water Pipeline Project
title_full_unstemmed Women, Water Resource Management, and Sustainable Development: The Turkey-North Cyprus Water Pipeline Project
title_sort women, water resource management, and sustainable development: the turkey-north cyprus water pipeline project
publisher MDPI AG
series Resources
issn 2079-9276
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Women’s role in water resource management is recognized, yet the implementation of methods and strategies to get beyond gender-based obstacles to women’s equal participation in water resource management related projects remain vague. Mainstream considerations on the gender aspects of development and environment focus on women as having an intrinsic relationship with the environment. Women are perceived as a natural reflection of their responsibilities for the household and the comfort and security of future generations. Contrary to mainstream environmental and political ecology research, this paper sees gender as relevant within policy and practice across multiple levels, and within institutions related to natural resource governance. Based on this, the paper looks at the sustainable development and water governance issues with the help of a specific case: the Turkey-North Cyprus Water Pipeline Project. Through broad reviews of project documentation, interviews with people who were directly involved with the project and with women’s organizations the paper draws insights on the gender aspect of the decision-making mechanisms related to water governance. The results indicate that participation by women in resource management is marginal in North Cyprus. The paper discusses that this is a reflection of a broader problem, which is gender inequality. In conclusion, one can argue that future water projects need to realize more sustainable outcomes and greater effects on gender equality in North Cyprus.
topic North Cyprus
natural resource management
gender inequality
water governance and participatory development
women’s empowerment
url http://www.mdpi.com/2079-9276/7/3/50
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