TY - BOOK AU - Hettige, S. T., ed. AU - Gerharz, Eva, ed. TI - Governance, conflict and development in South Asia: perspectives from India, Nepal and Sri Lanka SN - 9789351501008 U1 - 320.954 PY - 2015/// CY - New Delhi PB - Sage KW - Social conflict KW - South Asia KW - Politics and government KW - Economic development N1 - List of figures List of tables Contributors Foreword:A quarter century of knowledge and change: pushing feminism, politics, and ecology in new directions with feminist political ecology; Acknowledgments; 1 Introduction: towards a feminist political ecology of women, global change, and vulnerable waterscapes; PART I 1 Feminist political ecology and large-scale water resource management. 2 Interrogating large-scale development and inequality in Lesotho: bridging feminist political ecology, intersectionality, and environmental justice frameworks 3 The silent (and gendered) violence: understanding water access in mining areas; 4 Urban water visibility in Los Angeles: legibility and access for all; 5 Advances and setbacks in women's participation in water management in Brazil; PART II Women and innovative adaptation to global environmental change; 6 Climate-water challenges and gendered adaptation strategies in Rayón, a riparian community in Sonora, Mexico. 7 International partnerships of women for sustainable watershed governance in times of climate change 8 Women's contributions to climate change adaptation in Egypt's Mubarak Resettlement Scheme through cactus cultivation and adjusted irrigation; PART III Stories, narratives, and knowledge production of socio-environmental change; 9 Shoes in the seaweed and bottles on the beach: global garbage and women's oral histories of socio-environmental change in coastal Yucatán. 10 Storytelling water north of the future Héen Kas'él'ti Xoo (among the ragged lakes): collaborative water research with Carcross/Tagish First Nation, Yukon Territory, Canada11 Pamiri women and the melting glaciers of Tajikistan: a visual knowledge exchange for improved environmental governance; 12 Conclusions: advancing multi-disciplinary scholarship on gender, water, and environmental change through feminist political ecology; Appendix: Tlingit/Tagish stories; Index ER -