RIPPLES OF INEQUITY: GENDERED CURRENTS IN NIGERIA’S WATER AND SANITATION SECTOR
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Date
2024
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Publisher
Obafemi Awolowo University Press, Ile-Ife, Nigeria
Abstract
The need to improve gender access to water and sanitation in Africa has elicited a lot of discussions and scholarly research in developing
countries worldwide. Women's rights activists and other concerned stakeholders have argued for the gender’s increased access and
control over water and sanitation. This chapter examines the relationship between the ripples of gender inequity in Nigeria’s water and
sanitation sector of the environmental space. The study highlights the impacts of discrimination against women concerning access and
control in the critical water sector and the ripple effects on sanitation for a healthier family and society. It identifies the gaps and
challenges in women’s access to water and sanitation. It seeks ways of strengthening women’s rights to water and sanitation; achieving
the possible benchmark in the context of seven United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), especially SDG 6 which focuses
on clean water and sanitation by ensuring water and sanitation for all is available and sustainable. The study relied on secondary data
sources and the review of extant literature on major sub-themes of gender access to water and sanitation, the situation analysis, regional
disparities, and challenges in the sector for improved access in the sector. It concludes by providing recommendations on how to promote
policies, dialogue, advocacy, partnerships, and capacity building to support gender access to water and good sanitation practices.
Description
Keywords
Water, Sanitation, Health, Gender, Sustainable, Nigeria