Slums, women and sanitary living in South-South Nigeria.

Emmanuel M Akpabio, Nsikan-Abasi U Wilson, Kemfon A Essien, Iniubong E Ansa, Princess N Odum
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

How much do slums affect women's ability to negotiate access to water, sanitation and hygiene (WaSH)? We used random narratives, interviews, and a review of literature from theoretical and secondary sources to capture the experiences of slum dwellers in South-South Nigeria. Our findings demonstrate that women and girls bear disproportionate burden and risk of poor and inadequate WaSH services in the course of domestic supplies and management and making tough choices in negotiating between personal sanitary needs of privacy and safety as well as attending to domestic hygiene, childcare and other chores. These lived realities and experiences are partly associated with gendered public policy practices, linked to the broader socio-cultural norm that confine women's roles to the private/domestic spheres, while men are free to pursue higher aspirations and opportunities. Limited State capacity to guarantee universal access to WaSH for slum dwellers automatically shifts the responsibility for its provision to the private/domestic domain with women bearing the greater burden. We argue that the non-recognition of slums in official discourses limit their consideration for essential public services provision, and the implication of such neglect is discussed in the context of the consequences on women in the course of negotiating access to WaSH.

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尼日利亚南南的贫民窟、妇女和卫生生活。
贫民窟对妇女谈判获得水、环境卫生和个人卫生(WaSH)的能力有多大影响?我们使用随机叙述、访谈和对理论和二手文献的回顾来捕捉尼日利亚南南贫民窟居民的经历。我们的研究结果表明,在家庭用品和管理过程中,妇女和女孩承受着不良和不充分的WaSH服务的不成比例的负担和风险,并在隐私和安全的个人卫生需求以及照顾家庭卫生,儿童保育和其他家务之间进行艰难的选择。这些生活现实和经验部分地与性别公共政策做法有关,与将妇女的作用限制在私人/家庭领域的更广泛的社会文化规范有关,而男子则可以自由地追求更高的愿望和机会。国家保障贫民窟居民普遍获得讲卫生服务的能力有限,因此自动将提供讲卫生服务的责任转移到私人/家庭领域,妇女承担更大的负担。我们认为,官方话语中对贫民窟的不承认限制了他们对基本公共服务提供的考虑,并且在谈判获得WaSH的过程中对妇女的影响的背景下讨论了这种忽视的含义。
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