Your search found 5 records
1 Sawhney, T.; Abraham, P.; Devavaram, J.; Nagaraja, N.; Nayak, T. 1996. Community participation in DANWADEP: A comparative analysis. In Jensen, J. R.; Seth, S. L.; Sawhney, T.; Kumar, P. (Eds.), Watershed development: Emerging issues and framework for action plan for strengthening a learning process at all levels. Proceedings of Danida's First International Workshop on Watershed Development, held at Hubli and Bangalore, Karnataka State, India, from 2-10 December 1995. New Delhi, India: Danida's Watershed Development Programme. Watershed Development Coordination Unit. pp.297-338.
Watershed management ; Development projects ; Social participation ; Analysis ; Project appraisal ; Training ; Villages ; Institution building ; Farmers' associations ; Case studies / India / Tirunelveli / Ramanathapuram / Karnataka / Koraput
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G000 JEN Record No: H021725)

2 Nayak, T. 2000. Promoting low cost technology and cost sharing for community participation in watershed management. In Mehrotra, R.; Soni, B.; Bhatia, K. K. S. (Eds.), Integrated water resources management for sustainable development - Volume II. Roorkee, India: National Institute of Hydrology. pp.1003-1011.
Watershed management ; Social participation ; Water conservation ; Farming systems ; Villages / India / Orissa / Koraput / Kanagaon / Malkangiri
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G000 MEH Record No: H028113)

3 Seth, S. L.; Damgaard-Larsen, S. 1999. DANIDA-supported participatory watershed development. In Farrington, J.; Turton, C.; James, A. J. (Eds.), Participatory watershed development: Challenges for the twenty-first century. New Delhi, India: OUP. pp.81-88.
Watershed management ; Development projects ; Participatory management ; Social participation ; Women ; Villages ; Rural development ; Non-governmental organizations ; Economic growth ; Constraints / India / Orissa / Koraput
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G635 FAR Record No: H028370)

4 Nayak, T. 1999. Co-operation with NGOs for people's participation in watershed development projects. In Farrington, J.; Turton, C.; James, A. J. (Eds.), Participatory watershed development: Challenges for the twenty-first century. New Delhi, India: OUP. pp.165-173.
Watershed management ; Social participation ; Non-governmental organizations ; Participatory rural appraisal ; Villages ; Farmers attitudes ; Income ; Woman's status ; Women in development ; Leadership / India / Orissa / Koraput / Madhya Pradesh / Malkangiri
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 333.91 G635 FAR Record No: H028377)

5 Mitra, A.; Rao, N. 2019. Gender, water, and nutrition in India: an intersectional perspective. Water Alternatives, 12(1):169-191. (Special issue: Farmer-led Irrigation Development in Sub-Saharan Africa: Investment, Policy Engagements and Agrarian Transformation).
Gender ; Women's participation ; Water availability ; Water quality ; Nutrition ; Food security ; Agriculture ; Public health ; Sanitation ; Defaecation ; Social aspects ; Villages ; Households / India / Wardha / Koraput
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H049111)
http://www.water-alternatives.org/index.php/alldoc/for-authors/485-a12-1-11/file
https://vlibrary.iwmi.org/pdf/H049111.pdf
(0.72 MB) (736 KB)
Despite the global recognition of women’s central role in the provision, management, and utilisation of water for production and domestic use, and despite the close links between production choices, the security of water for consumption, and gendered social relations, the implications of these interlinkages for health and nutrition are under-explored. This paper seeks to fill this gap. It unpacks the gendered pathways mediating the links between water security in all its dimensions and nutritional outcomes, based on research in 12 villages across two Indian states. The findings point to the importance of the dynamic links between natural (land and water) systems and gendered human activities, across the domains of production and reproduction, and across seasons. These links have implications for women’s work and time burdens. They impact equally on physical and emotional experiences of well-being, especially in contexts constrained by the availability, access, quality, and stability of water.

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