Women, Water, and Sanitation: Gendered Inequalities, Rights, and Pathways to Equity
W ater and sanitation are fundamental to human dignity, health, and development. Yet across much of the world, access to safe drinking water, adequate sanitation, and hygienic facilities remains deeply unequal, and these inequalities are profoundly gendered. Women and girls are disproportionately affected by water scarcity, poor sanitation, and inadequate hygiene services. They are often the primary collectors, managers, and users of household water, while also bearing the heaviest physical, social, and economic burdens when water and sanitation systems fail. Understanding the interlinkages between women, water, and sanitation is therefore essential for achieving gender equality, improving public health, and advancing sustainable development. Water and sanitation systems are not gender-neutral; they are shaped by social power relations that determine who accesses resources, who bears risks, and whose needs are prioritized. Gen...