Men, Masculinities and Water Powers in Irrigation (inglés)
22 agosto 2008Margreet Zwarteveen
Water Alternatives 1(1): 111‐130
2008
The aim of this article is to provide an informed plea for more explicitly identifying, naming and unravelling the linkages between water control and gender in irrigation. The fact that power, expertise and status in irrigation tend to have a strong masculine connotation is by now quite well established, and underlies calls for more women in water decision making, engineering education and professions. Yet, the questions of how and why water control, status and expertise are linked to masculinity, and of whether and how such links work to legitimize the exercise of power, are seldom asked. To date, associations between masculinity and professional water performance have largely been taken for granted and remained unexamine. The resulting perceived normalcy makes mechanisms of (gendered) power and politics in water appear self evident, unchangeable, and indeed gender neutral.