2022
DOI: 10.5751/es-12716-270116
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Toward a feminist political ecology of household food and water security during drought in northern Nicaragua

Abstract: Few studies assess the relationship between food and water access, despite global concerns about people's inability to maintain access to both food and water. We conducted a mixed-methods comparative case study in northern Nicaragua, with smallholders from two neighboring communities that differed in water availability and institutional strength, using a feminist political ecology framework and food and water security definitions that focus on access, availability, use, and stability. We adopted a participator… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…But in doing so, it also then reproduces existing notions of femininity and masculinity as they relate to water. We note that while some ethnographic studies acknowledge gender fluidity around water roles (e.g., Bacon et al, 2021), fluidity is rarely the object of study. As such, it has been noted that, given the fluidity of both gender norms, roles, and water conditions, a primary set of questions to be interrogated includes how these are given the appearance of fixity and stability, despite their inherent fluidity over space and time (Harris, 2006).…”
Section: Intersectionality and Intersectional Identities Amentioning
confidence: 91%
“…But in doing so, it also then reproduces existing notions of femininity and masculinity as they relate to water. We note that while some ethnographic studies acknowledge gender fluidity around water roles (e.g., Bacon et al, 2021), fluidity is rarely the object of study. As such, it has been noted that, given the fluidity of both gender norms, roles, and water conditions, a primary set of questions to be interrogated includes how these are given the appearance of fixity and stability, despite their inherent fluidity over space and time (Harris, 2006).…”
Section: Intersectionality and Intersectional Identities Amentioning
confidence: 91%
“…What happens to women and nature is not only rooted in the "innate" relationship between women and nature that many have come to accept. It is also embedded in structural and material inequalities (Bacon et al, 2022). Climate change is increasingly presented as a security issue; this "climate security" discourse arguably gives a greater sense of urgency to the already alarming climate crisis.…”
Section: Indigenous Women Empowered: a Response To The Climate Crisismentioning
confidence: 99%