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Integrating Gender Perspective in Sustainable Sanitation

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[[File:Susana logo.png|right|90px|alt=Susana logo.png|link=http://www.susana.org/en/]]This article is based on a [http://www.susana.org/en/resources/library/details/1229 1187 factsheet] that provides background information on the needs and methods required to integrate gender perspectives into sustainable sanitation. Access to safe sanitation is a basic human right for all women, men and children.
Key messages from this factsheet are:
 
*Gender equality is an integral part of sustainable sanitation meaning that the sanitation system should consider the differing needs and should be suitable for women, men and children.<br/>
*Women are often involved in water, hygiene and sanitation but lack support to deal with these issues<br/>
*There is an unspoken but grave situation in the everyday lives of millions of school girls and women that make it difficult for them to walk freely and in a comfortable manner, to go to the toilet or to manage their menstruation sustainably.<br/>
*The special needs of menstruating girls and women need to be considered in appropriate sanitation programme designs by providing adequate female hygiene materials, discreet disposal and washing facilities.
 
=== 1. Background on gender and sanitation ===
 
Access to safe and sustainable sanitation is essential to ensuring health and wellbeing. It reduces the burden of treating preventable illnesses and is a prerequisite for ensuring education for all and the promotion of economic growth in the poorest parts of the world. Access to adequate sanitation is a matter of security, privacy and human dignity. Integrating a gender perspective into the sanitation sector does not only require addressing differences in gender relations, it also means uncovering and challenging uneven hierarchical structures based on gender. Consequently, a gender-sensitive approach seeks to equalise the uneven distribution of sanitation roles and responsibilities and the access to safe and appropriate facilities by considering the basic needs of all men, women and children. One of the most significant divides between women and men, especially in developing countries, is found in the sanitation and hygiene sector. The provision of water, hygiene and sanitation is often considered a woman’s task. Women are promoters, educators and leaders of home and community-based sanitation practices yet their own concerns are rarely addressed. Societal barriers often restrict their involvement in decisions regarding sanitation facilities and programmes (GWA, 2006).
[[File:2015-02-18 214252.png|thumb|right|200px|Figure 1: Sanitation approaches can be more empowering if both women and men are involved in planning and training: Sanitation workshop in Central Asia (source: F. Jorritsma, WECF, 2010)2015-02-18 214252.png]]In many societies, women’s views, in contrast to those of men, continue to be systematically under-represented in decision-making bodies (ADB, 1998). This lack of a participatory approach is closely related to the uneven power structures in decision-making processes that characterise these societies and the sanitation sector in particular. Where sincere efforts have been made to integrate gender perspectives into the water and sanitation sector, these have unfortunately often failed to address strategic gender needs (Coles and Wallace, 2005).
Women suffer more than men when there is a lack of appropriate sanitation facilities. Women suffer more indignity from defecating and urinating in the open than men and in some countries are regularly at risk of assault and rape while going to the toilet (COHRE et al., 2008). In many countries, hygiene conditions in public toilets are poor and spread infectious diseases. In the absence of sanitary facilities or due to cultural reasons, women in many countries often have to wait until dark to go to the toilet or the bush. As a result, these women try to drink as little as possible during the day and often suffer from associated health problems such as urinary tract infections, chronic constipation and other gastric disorders (GWA, 2006; Milhailova and Diaz, 2007).
=== 2. What does gender mean? ===
 
Gender identifies the social relationships between women and men. Gender is socially constructed; gender relations are contextually specific and often change in response to altering circumstances (Moser, 1993). Men and women fulfil a number of concurrent social roles and social relations that are influenced by other people. Race, ethnicity, age, culture, tradition, religion and an “individual’s position” (wealth, status) also contribute to differentiating the experience of being a man or a woman within a particular society. Gender identity and gender roles are the result of learned behaviour and given the right impetus and motivation can change. The challenge in this context is that men’s and women’s gender roles determine their access to - as well as their power and control over - adequate water supply, sanitation facilities and hygiene. Unchallenged, these roles can continue to have a direct negative effect on communities, households and individuals, in particular women and children.
=== 3. International commitments and goals for gender equality in relation to sanitation ===
 
'''Millennium Development Goal (MDG 3)''' calls for the promotion of gender equality and women’s empowerment. Four indicators are used to monitor progress: education, literacy, wage employment and political representation.
=== 4. The role of women an men in sanitation ===
 
In most countries, cleaning toilets is primarily the responsibility of women, for any type of sanitation system. Men are generally responsible for the construction and technical maintenance of the sanitation facility (e.g. digging and repairing). In many households, women are responsible for making sure there is sufficient water for sanitation purposes which may involve carrying water for long distances. They are also involved in pit emptying activities; although this is a burden for men as well (anecdotal evidence suggests that e.g. in India and Pakistan, more women than men have to empty pits whereas in countries in Sub-Saharan Africa it is the other way around). Either way, the conditions under which such manual pit emptying is carried out are usually appalling, regardless of whether it is men or women doing the work.
[[File:2015-02-18 223033.png|thumb|right|200px|Figure 2: School toilet in Tanzania: The special needs of girls and women during the time of menstruation – such as privacy, facilities for disposal of sanitary materials – must be brought to the forefront (source: M. Sommer, 2009)2015-02-18 223033.png]]In the design, location, selection and construction of sanitation facilities, too little attention is paid to the specific needs of women and men, girls and boys as well as their respective roles in terms of maintaining the facilities. Sanitation programmes, like many other development programmes, often assume a high degree of gender neutrality. This results in gender-specific failures such as toilets with doors facing the street in which women feel insecure, school urinals that are too high for boys, a lack of disposal facilities for female sanitary materials and pourflush toilets that increase the workload of those women who have to carry the water needed for the toilets.
=== 5. Methods to assess the role and impact on females in sanitation ===
 
This lack of progress is partly due to the general absence of specifically collected data from and about females in water and sanitation. This lack of data causes issues such as:
 
*Difficulties to adequately measure change over time, and the impact interventions have had on gender equality and whether such changes contribute towards the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) or other goals.
*Difficulties to make effective analytical assessments of the comparative situation of women and men.
*Sound policy formulation is hampered by the lack of information about the gender-related realities of water and sanitation access as well as the need and use of sanitation in private and public sectors. Genderdisaggregated data is crucial when assessing the effects of policy measures on women and men.
 
=== 6. Special needs of girls and women during menstruation ===
 [[File:2015-02-18 223957.png|thumb|right|200px|Figure 3: Hygiene education at school for both girls and boys in Tanzania (photo by M. Sommer, 2009)2015-02-18 223957.png]]There is a long overdue need for the water and sanitation community to address the need for menstrual hygiene management (MHM) in schools in low-income settings as it has been overlooked in the past. Key components of a girl friendly school environment include: 
*Well-designed, clean, safe, private toilets in sufficient numbers for female students with locks on the inside of the doors<br/>
*Clean water inside or very near to the toilets so girls can wash menstrual blood off their hands and stains from their clothing without boys watching;<br/>
*Sensitising school administrators and teachers to challenges associated with menstrual hygiene management;<br/>
*The provision of menstrual adaptable underwear for girls (with removable sanitary pads).<br/>
 
=== 7. Integrating gender in sanitation ===
 
According to the Ecosoc (UN Economic and Social Council) definition, gender mainstreaming can be understood as “the process of assessing the implications for women and men of any planned action, including legislation, policies or programmes, in any area and at all levels. The following elements of the gender mainstreaming process can safeguard a gender perspective in sustainable sanitation (ADB, 1998).
 
#Gender analysis
#Impact assessment
#Income generation
#Involvement of boys and men
 
=== 8. Acknowledgements ===
 
SuSanA factsheet: Capacity development for sustainable sanitation. April 2012. [http://www.susana.org/en/ susana.org]
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