Table of Contents
FINALWater, Gender and Development: An Introduction: Tina Wallace, University of Oxford and Anne Coles, University of Oxford Taking the Waters: Cosmology, Gender and Material Culture in the Appropriation of Water Resources--Veronica Strang is Professor of Social Anthropology, Department of Anthropology, University of Auckland.The Role of Water in an Unequal Social Order in India--Deepa Joshi, Southampton University, and Ben Fawcett, University of Southampton Naked Power: Women and the Social Production of Water in Anglophone Cameroon--Ben Page, University College London Water Supply, Social Relations, Ethnicity and Livelihoods in central Sudan-Anne Coles, University of OxfordGender Mainstreaming in the Water Sector in Nepal: A Real Commitment or a Token?-Shibesh Regmi, Director, Actionaid, Nepal The Challenge to Internations NGOs of Incorporating GenderTina Wallace, University of Oxford, and Pauline Wilson, freelance consultant to the NGO sectorMisunderstanding Gender in Water-Addressing or Reproducing Exclusion-Deepa Joshi, University of SouthamptonEnabling Women to Participate in African Smallholder Irrigation Development and Design--Felicity Chancellor, Formerly Hydraulics Research, OxonWater and AIDS: Problems Associated with the Home Based Care of AIDS Patients on a Rural Area of Northern Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa--Anne Hutchings, University of Zululand and Gina Buijis, University of Zululand Gender and Poverty Approach in Practice: Lessons Learned in NepalUmesh Pandy, NEWAH, Nepal , and Michelle Moffat, NEWAH, NepalEasier to Say, Harder to Do-Gender, Equity and Water-Sarah House, Chartered Civil Engineer, currently working as a Freelance Water / Public Health Engineer.