Lexington Books
Pages: 188
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4985-2083-6 • Hardback • January 2018 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-2084-3 • eBook • January 2018 • $105.50 • (£82.00)
Assata Zerai isprofessor of sociology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Brenda N. Sanya is A. Lindsay O'Connor visiting assistant professor of educational studies at Colgate University.
Introduction: Assata Zerai and Brenda N. SanyaChapter 1: The Lives of Women and Children in East AfricaAssata Zerai
Chapter 2: Structural and Economic Analysis of Declines in Water and Sanitation in East Africa
Shorma Bianca Bailey and Assata Zerai
Chapter 3. Public Goods, Citizenship Rights: How Lingering Structural Inequalities Define Social Services and Government Policies
Brenda N. Sanya
Chapter 4: Access to Safe Water, Women’s Empowerment, and Decentralization Systems in TanzaniaTeresia R. Olemako
Chapter 5: Gender as Social Structure and its Potential Impact on Safe Water and Sanitation Technologies in East Africa: An African Feminist Analysis
Assata Zerai and Rebecca Morrow
Chapter 6: Environmental Contamination and Early Childhood Morbidity in Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda
Assata Zerai, Rebecca Morrow, and Courtney Cuthbertson
Conclusion: Paying Serious Attention to Women’s Scholarship to Influence Policy in East Africa
Assata Zerai and Joanna Perez
Appendix 1: River Basin Model and Decentralization SystemAppendix 2: Population in the Area under Study in Tanzania’s Pangani River Basin
Appendix 3: Safe Global Water and Sanitation Institute Summit Program
Too often, the debates on development and gender are either too abstract or too technical. This book strikes the right balance to deliver practical and transformational knowledge. Assata Zerai and Brenda Sanya, along with a diverse group of scholars, offer a rich analysis of everyday development challenges (safe water, sanitation, and health) through an African feminist lens. In this book, they simultaneously examine the common challenges in achieving core development goals and provide a powerful critique of the gendered development knowledge system. By simply asking 'Where are the women?', they provide a catalytic perspective for weaving Africanist, feminist, and social justice discourses into a compelling analysis of everyday development challenges and structural inequality in Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda and a liberating critique of gendered knowledge in development studies. In the end, they not only expand our understanding of how the exclusion of women from policy design and implementation happens, but also elucidate the consequences of women’s exclusion on households and communities. More importantly, they remind us that a crucial source of social change is the efforts of mothers, health professionals, and activists to advocate for clean water, safe sanitation, and health resources.
— Abu Bakarr Bah, Northern Illinois University
For African feminists on the African continent and in the diaspora, this book provides a theoretical and empirical vindication for the long-held view that without the voices of African and girls informing research and development efforts, the cycle of inequality and poverty will continue unabated. The co-editors, Assata Zerai and Brenda Sanya, have used their own ‘voices’, research interests, and activism to assemble a group of feminist scholars to dialogue on the ways in which the lives of women and children in the three east African countries are negatively impacted by poor access to water and sanitation. Together and individually, the chapters provide a rich theoretical and empirical analysis of how the continuing marginalization of women and girls’ voices from research and development efforts only exacerbates their suffering and leads to further gendered negative health and other development outcomes. The book promises to be a wonderful resource for feminist and development scholars, not only in East Africa, but throughout the continent and beyond.
— Relebohile Moletsane, University of KwaZulu-Natal