Eliminating Violence & Poverty

Women Led Water Infrastructure

For organizations engaged in water infrastructure development and women’s empowerment, we are delighted to share resources and insights gained since we trained our first women’s water teams in 2007.

When Global Grassroots first began its work with women survivors of genocide in Rwanda, we were issue agnostic. We focused on what women cared about most in their communities. But quickly we realized there was something about clean water access that involved links to nearly every other issue women were facing in their communities from violence to health to education. Since we trained our first women’s water teams in 2007, we’ve now supported 38 women-led water ventures that are serving 114,000 people in their communities, of which 95% are still operating. For organizations engaged in water infrastructure development around the world, we are delighted to share some of our insights gained from across the years from our women-led teams: 

Key Lessons

Key Success Factors

Water Access

A Root Cause of Poverty, Violence & Vulnerability

Globally, of the 1.8 billion people who have no access to safe water, women and girls bear the greatest burden for its collection. on average, women and girls travel 6 km/3.7 miles taking up to two hours every day to collect and transport water to their home.

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Women-Led Solutions

Maximize Social Impact

Women who manage their own clean water access not only ensure the most vulnerable women and girls are no longer subjected to violence, but when women lead and manage water ventures it provides greater confidence, agency, leadership and engagement in community as change leaders.

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Global Grassroots Model

Conscious Social Change

Global Grassroots’s model for women-led water enterprises has involved a two-year program that includes a unique blend of training, high-engagement support, and seed funding.

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Integrating Mindfulness

Drives Sustainability

Our unique holistic blend of trauma-healing practices, inner work, and a mindfulness-based social venture incubator, together catalyzes inner and outer transformation.

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Call to Action

The link between women and water is clear. Women must be engaged in all aspects of planning, design, implementation and management of water infrastructure. While other NGOs commit to advancing the rights and wellbeing of women, it can serve to make explicit the critical link between women’s wellbeing and opportunity and their access to water. Further, UNWomen in its commitment to advancing women’s wellbeing must consider women’s access to clean water a critical human right that can serve as a potent lever for advancing women’s well-being on many other levels. Finally, global NGOs and environmental agencies committed to protecting clean water must not ignore the vested interests of women, and the knowledge base they represent in terms of the location, quality and reliability of water sources. Engaging women in the solutions-design and management of clean water is essential for long-term community prosperity.