Locally Led Opportunities for Water, Sanitation and Hygiene, Climate Change and Gender Equality Partnerships in the Blue Pacific
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
Search Approach
3. Results
3.1. Coalitions in the Blue Pacific
3.2. Gender Equality Partnerships and Coalitions in the Blue Pacific
North–South Gender Equality Organisation Partnerships
3.3. Climate Change Partnerships and Coalitions in the Blue Pacific
3.4. WASH Sector Partnerships in the Blue Pacific
3.5. Thematic Analysis of Included Studies
4. Discussion
4.1. Partnerships and Coalitions Are Part of a Critical Localism Agenda
4.2. Success Factors for Locally Led Partnerships
4.3. Gender within Partnerships, Partnerships Contributing to Gender Equality
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
“Blue Pacific” “French Polynesia” “Marshall Islands” “New Caledonia” “Solomon Islands” “South Pacific” Pacific Fiji Futuna Kiribati Melanesia Micronesia Nauru Oceani * Palau Timor-Leste Tonga Tuvalu Vanuatu Wallis | “Climate change” “Social inclusion” Disabil * Equality GEDSI Gender Sanitation WASH Water Women Youth | “Civil Society Organisations” “Collective action” “Social movements” Coalitions NGOs Partnerships |
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Theme | Summary | Example References |
---|---|---|
1. Partnerships and coalitions are part of a critical localism agenda. | Critical localism can and does involve civil society connections and pathways. Discourse around localism incorporates civil society partnerships, social movements and collectivism as ways to support locally led development. Critical localism can be summarised as a form of locally led development which has a focus on inclusion and addresses power dynamics within society to avoid elite capture and/or perpetuating inequalities for people and communities. | [7,32] |
Critical localism in the Pacific is an alternative to colonial development models. Localism has developed in response to top-down and Northern-led development priorities, processes and modalities and requires a change in policy and practice. Some proponents prefer the term “locally led”. | [37,62] | |
Collective action can be neo-colonial. Power dynamics between North and South women’s movements and organisations in the Blue Pacific can include Global North organisations lacking contextual and cultural understanding of the focus country and communities and following their own agendas with little input from local organisations. | [37] | |
The strength of civil society across Blue Pacific communities varies given traditional, gendered and social norms limiting citizens’ active participation in civil society. Yet, this is changing, largely as a result of young people playing more roles in civil society, despite the continued structural minimisation of the roles they play. | [39] | |
2. Documented success factors and benefits of partnerships and coalitions are useful for maximising the impact of collective action. | A range of factors influence the success of coalitions. Coalition success factors in the Blue Pacific include local events and critical junctures; being locally driven and owned; sharing a common purpose, interests and sometimes values (or are able to navigate between conflicting values); and having adaptive and distributed leadership that is regularly renegotiated. The success of a coalition is also influenced by factors such as material power (e.g., wealth), organisational power (e.g., collective strength) and ideational factors (e.g., ability to shape ideas). Factors for success may include sustaining long-term action (for over a decade), learning from past mistakes, taking timely advantage of opportunities and engaging in knowledge and learning. | [1,36,49] |
Coalitions in the Blue Pacific are sometimes flexible and undefined in their core focus but provide important avenues for leadership and leveraging outcomes. Some coalitions, such as the Green Growth Coalition, have not tried to define their targets and outcomes or focus too narrowly, which can challenge traditional development funding, monitoring and evaluation, and partnership arrangements. | [52,53] | |
CSO climate change coalitions can facilitate learning and the co-creation and sharing of influential frameworks and ways of working across sectors. Climate change-focused coalitions from the Blue Pacific have worked together to co-create resilience frameworks and share learning around community-based adaptation approaches. The co-development of the framework was a key ingredient for partnership success. | [61] | |
Partnerships benefit from being based on friendship and trust. Friendship and solidarity are development strategies that can promote a long-term commitment built on trust and mutual responsibility. | [54,63] | |
3. Partnerships and coalitions drive GEDSI but are also influenced by gender norms. | Diverse partnerships can advance GEDSI and WASH outcomes. Partnering with diverse rights-holder organisations has become part of a broader trend within the rural water sector, as a way to achieve mutual and interrelated benefits of GEDSI and WASH and to realise more integrated service delivery models. | [6,7] |
Women’s and feminist alliances can increase impact at the regional level. Working together in regional alliances has been found to increase the impact of advocacy for the inclusion of feminist voices in dialogues with regional institutions. | [57] | |
Collective action is gendered. Collective action is gendered and can result in the reinforcement of gendered norms around male leadership and career/political advancement. Measures to increase inclusion and diversity within collective action efforts are, therefore, important to drive these goals in broader society, including locally led partnerships. | [55] |
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Grant, M.; Willetts, J. Locally Led Opportunities for Water, Sanitation and Hygiene, Climate Change and Gender Equality Partnerships in the Blue Pacific. Water 2024, 16, 872. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16060872
Grant M, Willetts J. Locally Led Opportunities for Water, Sanitation and Hygiene, Climate Change and Gender Equality Partnerships in the Blue Pacific. Water. 2024; 16(6):872. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16060872
Chicago/Turabian StyleGrant, Melita, and Juliet Willetts. 2024. "Locally Led Opportunities for Water, Sanitation and Hygiene, Climate Change and Gender Equality Partnerships in the Blue Pacific" Water 16, no. 6: 872. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16060872
APA StyleGrant, M., & Willetts, J. (2024). Locally Led Opportunities for Water, Sanitation and Hygiene, Climate Change and Gender Equality Partnerships in the Blue Pacific. Water, 16(6), 872. https://doi.org/10.3390/w16060872