“We are free when water is available”: gendered livelihood implications of sporadic water supply in Northern Ghana
Date
2020-03-12
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Local Environment
Abstract
Water shortages may present different and diverse implications for gender
subgroups particularly in low-income settings. Yet, little research has
documented the gendered livelihood implications of water shortages in
Ghana. Based on a cross-sectional mixed method research involving a
survey of 250 household heads and complemented with a qualitative
study of 86 participants, the paper examines the differential effects of
sporadic water supply in Tatale-Sanguli District of Northern Ghana. Our
findings suggest that the livelihood effects of sporadic water supply in
Tatale-Sanguli area are gendered, with females being disproportionately
affected as compared to males. These differential effects are often
framed by both gender role differentiation and inequities in access to
vital productive resources and critical assets such as bicycles, tricycles
and motor bikes. These findings highlight not only the need for local
government and non-governmental organisations to step up efforts in
water provision, but also to recognise the gendered effects of water
shortages in Tatale-Sanguli District. Key to policy is also to ensure that
programmatic interventions during water shortages take account of the
likely gendered effects and differentiated burdens
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Gender, livelihood, sporadic, water supply, Northern Ghana
Citation
Emmanuel Bintaayi Jeil, Kabila Abass & John Kuumuori Ganle (2020) “We are free when water is available”: gendered livelihood implications of sporadic water supply in Northern Ghana, Local Environment, 25:4, 320-335, DOI: 10.1080/13549839.2020.1744118