Mainstreaming gender into water management modelling processes

Date

Authors

Packett, Evangeline
Grigg, Nicola
Wu, Joyce
Cuddy, S M
Wallbrink, Peter
Jakeman, Anthony

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Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Pergamon-Elsevier Ltd

Abstract

Although the Dublin principles of Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) are well-established, the third principle on gender is commonly missing in practice. We use gender mainstreaming to identify examples where gender-specific perspectives might influence water resource management modelling choices. We show how gender considerations could lead to different choices in all modelling phases, providing examples from three familiar components of modelling practice: (a) problem framing and conceptualisation, (b) model construction, documentation and evaluation and (c) model interpretation and decision support. We suggest a future approach for integrating gender perspectives in modelling. Including gender dimensions could strengthen modelling results by engaging with a range of stakeholders and highlighting questions, knowledge, values and choices that may otherwise be overlooked. Such an approach won't always result in a different model and results. At the very least it's a mechanism to explore and reveal gendered assumptions knowingly, or unknowingly, embedded into the model.

Description

Citation

Source

Environmental Modelling and Software

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Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons Attribution licence

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