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2 - Negotiating Gender Equity through Decentralised Water Management in Coastal Gujarat: The Case of UTTHAN

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 October 2011

Sara Ahmed
Affiliation:
Social Activist
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Summary

She wakes me in the early morning for grinding flour,

In the nights I have to weave,

She sends me to fetch water very early in the morning,

Oh grandfather, it is very difficult for me.

My pot has never filled up in the well,

Water is so deep that my rope cannot reach there,

The sun rose and set too, but

Today I was unable to collect even a single pot of water.

Introduction

The current water crisis in several parts of Gujarat highlights the asymmetry in development based on the exploitation and inefficient management of critical natural resources (Hirway and Mahadevia 1999). Not only are water resources distributed unevenly across space and time, but the extent to which they have been utilised varies according to political and economic interests (Wood 1999). For example, the alluvial areas of north Gujarat receive low rainfall, but because of the good recharging potential of the aquifers, the region is rich in groundwater resources. However, over the last 40 years, these have been increasingly exploited for irrigation, resulting in the drying up of many open wells, and mining of deep aquifers. In contrast, the high rainfall regions of south Gujarat have poor groundwater conditions but provide scope for the development of surface water reservoirs (Hirway and Patel 1994:12–16).

Type
Chapter
Information
Flowing Upstream
Empowering Women through Water Management Initiatives in India
, pp. 51 - 92
Publisher: Foundation Books
Print publication year: 2005

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