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Regional overview: Gender and UEM Situationer

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Country difference in the seriousness of problem. Dili, ... 33% without sufficient potable water. 29% without sanitary toilet facility. Water and Sanitation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Regional overview: Gender and UEM Situationer


1
Regional overview Gender and UEM Situationer
  • Kyoko Kusakabe
  • Presented at
  • Regional training on gender equality in UEM
  • 28-30 March 2005
  • Quezon City, Philippines

2
(No Transcript)
3
Gender situation analysis on UEM in Southeast Asia
  • Dili, East Timor
  • Bangkok, Thailand
  • Yogyakarta, Indonesia
  • Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
  • Manila, the Philippines
  • Penang, Malaysia
  • Vientiane, Laos
  • Phnom Penh, Cambodia

4
Water and Sanitation
  • Country difference in the seriousness of problem
  • Dili, Phnom Penh, Vientiane, Manila, HCMC
  • Penang, Bangkok, Yogyakarta
  • 48 of household in HCMC are flooded
  • Philippines
  • 33 without sufficient potable water
  • 29 without sanitary toilet facility

5
Water and Sanitation
  • Dili
  • Only 30 of households have piped water. More
    than 10 use unprotected source.
  • 94 of women ranked access to clean water as the
    most important need.
  • Only 43.8 have safe sanitation.
  • 80 of children have intestinal parasitic
    infection.
  • insufficient sewage system ? mosquito-borne
    diseases, contaminated well water.

6
Water and Sanitaiton
  • Womens burden in taking care of sick children.
  • Lack of access to piped water ? fetching water
    from well/pumps time consuming.
  • Boiling water ? time burden for women.
  • Vietnam
  • Expenditure to buy water 100,000 D/month
  • While a waste pickers daily income is
    20,000-30,000 D per day.
  • Thailand ? water contamination with pesticide
    (peri-urban).

7
Solid waste
  • Increase in all cities.
  • Philippines
  • 1995 5565 tons per day
  • 1995 6102 tons per day
  • 2014 13,300 tons per day
  • Yogyakarta
  • Service reach only 25 of household
  • Thailand
  • Industrial waste

8
Solid waste
  • HCMC
  • Recycling industry
  • Women as solid waste volunteers
  • Womens role in household waste separation.

9
Air pollution
  • Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines
  • Industrial air pollution traffic
  • Cambodia, Vietnam
  • Traffic
  • East Timor
  • Fuelwood (cooking in enclosed kitchen)
  • Those affected most are different depending on
    the source of air pollution.

10
Gender issues in UEM
  • Gender-differentiated impact by deteriorating
    urban environment.
  • Gender-differentiated access to UEM services.
  • Gender-differentiated ability to make change.

11
Gender-differentiated impact
  • Gender difference in exposure to risk because of
    gender division of labor
  • SWM
  • use of water
  • air- street vendors, cooking
  • Different ability to protect themselves
  • (individual) affordability (car, water other
    service fees)
  • (collective) not able to influence policies (road
    factory construction, fees and services)

12
Gender-differentiated impact
  • Increase in workload and time constraint.
    (vis-à-vis benefit)
  • Increase in female-headed households
  • HCMC 60.3 are FHH
  • Penang incidence of poverty higher among FHH
    (16.0 vs. 7.5)
  • East Timor 12.1 are FHH

13
Access to services
  • Gender difference in needs for services because
    of
  • division of labor (health care, household work,
    biological)
  • Resources (need for state provision because of
    lack of resources - FHH)

14
Access to services
  • Gender differentiated access to services because
  • Gender-specific needs are not recognized by the
    state
  • Statistics are not gender-disaggregated
  • Considered small and unprofitable market
  • Lack of political pressure (e.g. Indonesia)
  • Womens needs not prioritized in household
    (self-restriction)

15
Ability to make change
  • Low political representation of women
  • Yogyakarta Municipality parliament
  • 2.5 are women.
  • HCMC
  • Ward officers 42 are women
  • Peoples council members of the ward 21.4
    women
  • Philippines
  • Less than 20 of all elected posts (national,
    local)
  • Laos
  • National assembly 21.2 women
  • Department directors 7.1 women

16
Ability to make change
  • Womens participation and ability to make changes
    can be hampered further by violence against women
  • HCMC
  • 83.5 of divorce cases by domestic violence.
  • Philippines
  • 54.7 of VAW is wife battering, 11.9 rape
  • Yogyakarta
  • 63 wife battering, worse for housewives.
  • East Timor
  • 50 of women experienced violence in the past one
    year. Only 15 of cases were referred.

17
Ability to make change
  • Opportunities
  • Income generation (c.f. recycling)
  • Womens groups
  • Visibility of womens role in community
  • Womens larger say in political decision

18
Thank you
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