在家庭用水不安全的性别化问题中,为什么生计很重要?

Elisabeth Kago Ilboudo Nébié, A. Brewis, Amber Wutich, Yogo Pérenne, Kadidiatou Magassa
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摘要

全球最紧迫和最直接的气候问题之一是家庭用水不足和不安全。小农户种植作物和饲养牲畜的生计尤其容易受到这些挑战的影响。过去的研究表明,水不安全问题具有高度的性别特征,理论上女性比男性更了解水不安全问题,也更受其影响。在西非萨赫勒地区的布基纳法索半干旱地区,水资源不安全与季节性和降雨的不可预测性密切相关,我们的研究通过生计视角重新审视了这些文献,比较了不同作物和牲畜生计模式下性别对家庭水资源不安全的看法。我们的混合方法人种学研究从 158 对主要从事畜牧业或农业的同居配偶中抽取了家庭中匹配的男性和女性,并收集了他们的用水不安全数据。与现有文献的预测相反,在同一家庭中,从事畜牧业的男性比匹配的女性更容易感受到水资源不安全。我们认为,这反映出男性有责任确保牲畜的用水--这消耗了畜牧业者家庭的大部分用水。相比之下,从事种植业的男性比同一家庭中的女性感受到的水不安全程度要低,这与过去研究的预测一致。我们的研究结果表明,性别与水不安全之间的关系比以往认识到的更加细微,与生计策略的关系也更加密切,这对如何在人们日常管理和体验最直接、最接近的气候相关挑战的背景下,从理论和方法上对水不安全进行概念化具有重要意义。
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Why Livelihoods Matter in The Gendering of Household Water Insecurity
One of the most pressing and immediate climate concerns globally is inadequate and unsafe household water. The livelihoods of smallholder crop and livestock farmers are especially vulnerable to these challenges. Past research suggests that water insecurity is highly gendered, and women are theorized to be more aware of and impacted by water insecurity than men. Our study re-engages this literature through a livelihood lens, comparing gendered perception of household water insecurity across crop and livestock subsistence modalities in a semi-arid region of Burkina Faso in the Sahel region of West Africa where water insecurity is closely intertwined with both seasonality and rainfall unpredictability. Our mixed-methods ethnographic study sampled matched men and women in households with water insecurity data collected from 158 co-resident spousal pairs who engaged primarily in pastoralism or agriculture. Contrary to predictions from the existing literature, men engaged in livestock husbandry perceived greater water insecurity than matched women in the same household. We suggest this reflects men’s responsibility for securing water for the animals—which consumes most of the household’s water among livestock farmers. In contrast, men engaged in cropping perceive less water insecurity than women in the same household, aligning with predictions from past research. Our findings suggest that the relationship between gender and water insecurity is more highly nuanced and related to livelihood strategies than previously recognized, with significant implications for how water insecurity is conceptualized theoretically and methodologically in the contexts of people’s everyday management and experience of the most immediate and proximate climate-related challenges.
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