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    Restoring the commons: a gendered analysis of customary water tenure in Sub-Saharan Africa

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    Authors
    van Koppen, Barbara
    Date Issued
    2023-02
    Language
    en
    Type
    Journal Article
    Review status
    Peer Review
    ISI journal
    Accessibility
    Open Access
    Usage rights
    CC-BY-4.0
    Metadata
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    Citation
    van Koppen, Barbara. 2023. Restoring the commons: a gendered analysis of customary water tenure in Sub-Saharan Africa. International Journal of the Commons, 17(1):1-11. [doi: https://doi.org/10.5334/ijc.1164]
    Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/129117
    External link to download this item: https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/10.5334/ijc.1164/galley/1207/download/
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/ijc.1164
    Abstract/Description
    Customary water tenure in low-and middle-income rural areas has received limited academic, policy, and legal attention as yet. This paper seeks to conceptualize and analyse gender-differentiated living customary water tenure, focusing on sub-Saharan Africa. Extensive literature review suggests four gendered domains: first, water needs and uses; second, strategies to meet those needs by directly accessing water sources, and, with increasing wealth by investing individually or collectively in water infrastructure for self-supply, creating infrastructure-related ‘commons’ in the case of collective systems; third, at community scale, the ‘sharing in’ of communities’ naturally available water resources that flow into infrastructure; and, fourth, ‘sharing out’ of those resources with neighbouring communities but also powerful third parties of foreign and national high impact users. Rendering the gendered community more visible as the main agent to manage its water resources as the commons provides evidence for a range of policies, laws and interventions, including gender equitable and community-led water infrastructure development integrating domestic and productive spheres; strengthening customary arrangements to share water resources as a commons within a community or with neighbouring communities, and the long overdue formal protection of customary water tenure against ‘water grabs’ by powerful third parties.
    CGIAR Author ORCID iDs
    Barbara Van Koppenhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-7707-8127
    Other CGIAR Affiliations
    Policies, Institutions, and Markets
    AGROVOC Keywords
    water tenure; customary tenure; gender analysis; women; men; legal pluralism; water resources; infrastructure; water sharing; commons
    Regions
    Sub-Saharan Africa
    Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
    International Water Management Institute
    Collections
    • IWMI Journal Articles [2546]

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