Water insecurity and gender-based violence: A global review of the evidence

WIREs Water Vol/Iss. 10(1) Wiley Published In Pages: 1-19
By Tallman, Paula S., Collins, Shalean, Salmon-Mulanovich, Gabriela, Rusyidi, Binahayati, Kothadia, Aman, Cole, Stroma

Abstract

This study conducted a literature review of papers regarding the association between water insecurity and gender-based violence. The authors found 18 articles that documented this relationship in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. The most common form of violence was an increased risk of sexual and physical violence for women who walked long distances to access water. Intimate partner violence was also reported due to household water inadequacy. However, there is a lack of information assessing gender-based violence and water insecurity in Latin America, North America, and Southeast Asia, and involving locally-based scholars. The authors suggest expanding the definition of "violence" in relation to water insecurity and adopting the term "gender-based water violence." They also encourage the development of cross-culturally validated measures of gender-based violence and standardized measures of water insecurity to evaluate interventions.

Samples

Sample Used Coded Data Comment
eHRAF World CulturesResearchers' ownLiterature on water insecurity and gender-based violence
PubMedResearchers' ownLiterature on water insecurity and gender-based violence
Web of ScienceResearchers' ownLiterature on water insecurity and gender-based violence
Google ScholarResearchers' ownLiterature on water insecurity and gender-based violence
JSTORResearchers' ownLiterature on water insecurity and gender-based violence
ScieloResearchers' ownLiterature on water insecurity and gender-based violence
HinariResearchers' ownLiterature on water insecurity and gender-based violence
PsychINFOResearchers' ownLiterature on water insecurity and gender-based violence
EmbaseResearchers' ownLiterature on water insecurity and gender-based violence
EBSCOResearchers' ownLiterature on water insecurity and gender-based violence
SCOPUSResearchers' ownLiterature on water insecurity and gender-based violence
NelitiResearchers' ownLiterature on water insecurity and gender-based violence

Hypotheses (1)

HypothesisSupported
Water insecurity is associated with gender-based violence.Supported

Documents and Hypotheses Filed By:jacob.kalodner