There's a right way to do it — informal arrangements for local resource management in Zimbabwe
Any community which has survived drought — and whose people enjoy relatively equal access to water — must be doing something right. Frances Cleaver explains why, although there is always room for improvement, this does not mean superfluous or rigid new structures for thesake of formalization.
sake of formalization.
Capacity building and institutional development: reflections on water
Franks, Tom
Public Administration and Development, Vol. 19 (1999), Iss. 1 P.51
https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1099-162X(199902)19:1<51::AID-PAD54>3.0.CO;2-N [Citations: 31]Equitable Gender Participation in Local Water Governance: An Insight into Institutional Paradoxes
Singh, Nandita
Water Resources Management, Vol. 22 (2008), Iss. 7 P.925
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11269-007-9202-z [Citations: 17]Tsunami resilience: Multi-level institutional arrangements, architectures and system of governance for disaster risk preparedness in Indonesia
Chang Seng, Denis Stanley
Environmental Science & Policy, Vol. 29 (2013), Iss. P.57
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2012.12.009 [Citations: 38]Giving women a voice on decision-making about water: barriers and opportunities in Laikipia, Kenya
Coulter, Janna E.
Witinok-Huber, Rebecca A.
Bruyere, Brett L
Dorothy Nyingi, Wanja
Gender, Place & Culture, Vol. 26 (2019), Iss. 4 P.489
https://doi.org/10.1080/0966369X.2018.1502163 [Citations: 13]- A call to action: organizational, professional, and personal change for gender transformative WASH programming
- Providing municipal faecal sludge management services: lessons from Bangladesh
- Menstrual hygiene management: education and empowerment for girls?
- Webwatch
- Transgender-inclusive sanitation: insights from South Asia