Beginning with colonial times and continuing to the present, irrigation engineering has been and is an important site for the construction of gendered power and hegemonic masculinities. The strong connection between masculinities and professional irrigation cultures provides one possible explanation of why hydraulic bureaucracies are so resistant to change: it makes behaviours and codes of conduct that are learned seem natural. Taking inspiration from masculinity studies and from feminist studies of technology and organizations, this article proposes two possible lines of inquiry for critically disentangling how the irrigation profession becomes or is made masculine. The first is the feminist historical analysis of water bureaucracies, and ...
Based on Feminist Institutionalism, this paper analyses the reasons for gender disbalance in water d...
In this article, using the Department of Irrigation in Nepal as a case study, we argue that professi...
In this article, using the Department of Irrigation in Nepal as a case study, we argue that professi...
Beginning with colonial times and continuing to the present, irrigation engineering has been and is ...
Beginning with colonial times and continuing to the present, irrigation has been an important site f...
ABSTRACT: The aim of this article is to provide an informed plea for more explicitly identifying, na...
Mainstreaming gender in water governance through “how to do gender” toolkits has long been a develop...
Mainstreaming gender in water governance through "how to do gender" toolkits has long been a develop...
This article argues that there are contradictions between gender goals and policies and the aspirati...
Summary This thesis documents my attempt to study masculinities among irrigation engineers and water...
This article discusses how gender segregation is expressed and recreated in water management in form...
There is a wealth of scholarly knowledge that aims to disentangle the complex relationship between g...
The right to water; gender and household water; gender and irrigation; irrigation as masculine ident...
Taking issue with how associations between technical prowess or entrepreneurship and masculinity ten...
This volume assesses the nexus of gender and transboundary water governance, containing empirical ca...
Based on Feminist Institutionalism, this paper analyses the reasons for gender disbalance in water d...
In this article, using the Department of Irrigation in Nepal as a case study, we argue that professi...
In this article, using the Department of Irrigation in Nepal as a case study, we argue that professi...
Beginning with colonial times and continuing to the present, irrigation engineering has been and is ...
Beginning with colonial times and continuing to the present, irrigation has been an important site f...
ABSTRACT: The aim of this article is to provide an informed plea for more explicitly identifying, na...
Mainstreaming gender in water governance through “how to do gender” toolkits has long been a develop...
Mainstreaming gender in water governance through "how to do gender" toolkits has long been a develop...
This article argues that there are contradictions between gender goals and policies and the aspirati...
Summary This thesis documents my attempt to study masculinities among irrigation engineers and water...
This article discusses how gender segregation is expressed and recreated in water management in form...
There is a wealth of scholarly knowledge that aims to disentangle the complex relationship between g...
The right to water; gender and household water; gender and irrigation; irrigation as masculine ident...
Taking issue with how associations between technical prowess or entrepreneurship and masculinity ten...
This volume assesses the nexus of gender and transboundary water governance, containing empirical ca...
Based on Feminist Institutionalism, this paper analyses the reasons for gender disbalance in water d...
In this article, using the Department of Irrigation in Nepal as a case study, we argue that professi...
In this article, using the Department of Irrigation in Nepal as a case study, we argue that professi...