Back to news

A tale of two issues

Pema Gyamtsho

3 mins Read

70% Complete
Photo credit: Jitendra Raj Bajracharya/ICIMOD.

Two issues were central for us this month: the need to challenge gender inequality and understanding the various dimensions and value of water. International Women’s Day (8 March) and World Water Day (22 March) provided us the opportunity to pause and consider these two important issues as individuals, as an institution, and collectively as the HKH region. While these two issues are usually marked and celebrated independently, for understandable reasons, they are also inextricably linked, especially in the context of our region. More importantly, both these issues are also central for our happiness, security, and wellbeing.

It is no secret that the rapid climatic, socioeconomic, and epidemiological changes that characterize our “new normal” continue to place an unequal burden on women. At the household and community levels, women in the HKH often find themselves taking the lead not just in their homes and farms but also in public life – doing business and interacting with government and other formalized institutions – especially since a majority of men, particularly young men, from our hills and mountains continue to migrate to cities and other countries for work.

There is also a strong link between women and water in our region. The responsibility for collecting, managing, and effectively using water for consumption, cooking, and cleaning at the household level has disproportionately fallen on women, historically. As such, women have, and continue to be, primary custodians of our water resources. However, what we are beginning to see is that the challenge and drudgery of this important responsibility is increasing.

Essential water sources like springs, which have served many mountain communities for generations, have started drying up. Sources like streams and rivers are becoming more polluted and unreliable. Such realities have forced women to travel even further in search of clean water. News of entire villages relocating as a result of water scarcity is becoming disturbingly more common in our region. Recent research and climate models show that such trends are likely to increase in the future. This, together with the projected increase in inter-seasonal water variability, is likely to compound the challenges. In other words, our dry seasons are likely to see much deeper and longer dry spells, while on the other hand, there is going to be too much water in seasons when water is easily available.

Both too little and too much water are major problems which directly affect our wellbeing. Droughts and floods are both major disasters which can lead to loss of lives and livelihoods, especially in our mountain regions where the majority of the people are still very much dependent on agriculture. Unfortunately, what we also know is water-related disasters in our region affect and impact women disproportionately.

What is then clear is that we will not be able to fully resolve water- or gender-related issues in the HKH without addressing their intersection with one another. We will be unable to understand the full value of water in the HKH without taking into consideration the gendered dimension to it. Similarly, addressing the status of women in the HKH would be incomplete without a full appreciation of both the positive and negative roles that water plays in their daily lives.

The theme for this year’s International Women’s Day was “Choose to Challenge”; and for World Water Day we all asked ourselves, “What is the value of water?” Taking them together, let’s choose to challenge any notion that gender and water can be separated, and instead let us start addressing the issues of both gender and water from the point of intersection of these fields. Only by making this the starting point will we really be able to get to the heart of both these major challenges in our region, and towards greater security and wellbeing of us all.

Stay current

Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.

Sign Up
2019 in retrospect: A year of impactful work

Dear friends and supporters of ICIMOD, I am pleased to share with you our Annual Report 2019 ...

International Day for Biological Diversity, 22 May 2018

今年是《生物多样性公约》生效第25周年。今年“国际生物多样性 日”庆祝的主题是“生物多样性保护:行动的 25 年”。 在过去的 25 年中,兴都库什喜马拉雅地区各个国家的山区生物多样性保护工作一直受益于 《生物多样性公约》等全球环境治理机制。尽管实现《生物多样性公约》的国家和全球目标仍是 巨大的挑战,对我们来说今年的“国际生物多样性日”是一个承前启后、继往开来的时刻。 兴都库什喜马拉雅地区是 2.4 亿人口的家园,并为占世界四分之一人口的 19 亿人提供水资 源。位于该地区的喜马拉雅、印缅、中国西南山区以及中亚山区历来就是紧密联系的跨境生物多 样性热点地区。这些热点地区为 30 亿人口的生计提供支持并保障他们的粮食安全,而这 30 亿人 口中包含了部分世界上最贫困及弱势的人群。 尊重兴都库什喜马拉雅地区生命的多样性及着眼于人民的福祉一直以来作为核心理念主导着 国际山地综合发展中心的工作,中心跨境景观保护与发展项目的各项行动就是最好的证明。通过 ...

Let’s celebrate achievements and take real action for ALL women

Across the Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH) region, many women are already leading the way. They’re managing natural resources, adapting to ...

Understanding ICIMOD’s Strategic Orientation

Institutional Positioning Mountain Focus: First and foremost, ICIMOD is for mountains and people, covering the Hindu Kush Himalaya (HKH). Mountain ecosystems ...

Nepal Floods Demand Climate Solutions

The unprecedented floods in Kathmandu and across Nepal serve as a grim reminder of the devastating reality of living in ...

International Women’s Day 2023 – Bridging the digital gender divide for equality in the HKH

Today is 8th March – International Women’s Day. Beyond celebrating the success of women in numerous fields and progress made ...

Building resilient livelihoods

This is not the first time that extreme vulnerability of ICIMOD’s regional member countries, and the Hindu Kush Himalayas, has ...

Pushing the reset button

As we start 2021, our immediate priority is to take stock of the lessons from the ...