Empowerment and water security among pastoralist women in the Maasai and Samburu communities of Northern Kenya

<p>The study explored questions around women, water and gendered power relations in Laikipia and Samburu counties of Northern Kenya using qualitative methods. It was based on the premise that one of the ways that women in patriarchal pastoralist communities are disempowered in relation to men...

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Main Author: Centre for Humanitarian Change
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: University of Oxford and Centre for Humanitarian Change 2018
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author Centre for Humanitarian Change
Centre for Humanitarian Change
author_facet Centre for Humanitarian Change
Centre for Humanitarian Change
author_sort Centre for Humanitarian Change
collection OXFORD
description <p>The study explored questions around women, water and gendered power relations in Laikipia and Samburu counties of Northern Kenya using qualitative methods. It was based on the premise that one of the ways that women in patriarchal pastoralist communities are disempowered in relation to men is through the gendered dynamics of domestic and livestock water security. It also anticipated that the poor performance of local water security initiatives would be shown to be a further factor in women’s relative disempowerment. </p> <p>The study has generated a wealth of granular detail about gender roles and responsibilities in relation to domestic water within the pastoral communities under exploration. The material helps deepen understanding about gender relationships within the household. The findings point to a need to revisit assumptions that equate responsibility for domestic water collection with the disempowerment of pastoralist women. For, in the study locations, women carry full responsibility for domestic water security and management and they also exert significantly more control over water collected for household use than men. Women are able to deny their husbands access to water they have collected because a man’s access to water within the family home is by consent, not by right. Thus, at the household level, female responsibility for domestic water is a source of some power, rather than a manifestation of disempowerment.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:c883ba6f-d9db-4c61-84d1-59bf560cbec72024-08-21T10:25:04ZEmpowerment and water security among pastoralist women in the Maasai and Samburu communities of Northern KenyaReporthttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_93fcuuid:c883ba6f-d9db-4c61-84d1-59bf560cbec7EnglishBulkUploadREACH_reports_2024_08University of Oxford and Centre for Humanitarian Change2018Centre for Humanitarian ChangeCentre for Humanitarian Change<p>The study explored questions around women, water and gendered power relations in Laikipia and Samburu counties of Northern Kenya using qualitative methods. It was based on the premise that one of the ways that women in patriarchal pastoralist communities are disempowered in relation to men is through the gendered dynamics of domestic and livestock water security. It also anticipated that the poor performance of local water security initiatives would be shown to be a further factor in women’s relative disempowerment. </p> <p>The study has generated a wealth of granular detail about gender roles and responsibilities in relation to domestic water within the pastoral communities under exploration. The material helps deepen understanding about gender relationships within the household. The findings point to a need to revisit assumptions that equate responsibility for domestic water collection with the disempowerment of pastoralist women. For, in the study locations, women carry full responsibility for domestic water security and management and they also exert significantly more control over water collected for household use than men. Women are able to deny their husbands access to water they have collected because a man’s access to water within the family home is by consent, not by right. Thus, at the household level, female responsibility for domestic water is a source of some power, rather than a manifestation of disempowerment.</p>
spellingShingle Centre for Humanitarian Change
Centre for Humanitarian Change
Empowerment and water security among pastoralist women in the Maasai and Samburu communities of Northern Kenya
title Empowerment and water security among pastoralist women in the Maasai and Samburu communities of Northern Kenya
title_full Empowerment and water security among pastoralist women in the Maasai and Samburu communities of Northern Kenya
title_fullStr Empowerment and water security among pastoralist women in the Maasai and Samburu communities of Northern Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Empowerment and water security among pastoralist women in the Maasai and Samburu communities of Northern Kenya
title_short Empowerment and water security among pastoralist women in the Maasai and Samburu communities of Northern Kenya
title_sort empowerment and water security among pastoralist women in the maasai and samburu communities of northern kenya
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