2015 UN-Water Annual International Zaragoza Conference. Water and Sustainable Development: From Vision to Action. 15-17 January 2015

Interviewing Meenakshi Shedde

Meenakshi Shedde, Freelance Journalist, Mumbai, India

Meenakshi Shedde

What water-themed work have you been working on (reporting, editing research)?
In my experience, dealing with water issues calls for a holistic approach. I have been a journalist for 30 years, a Communications Consultant specializing in Development Issues, including water, gender, health and education for 20 years, and a professor of journalism for over 20 years. I have been Rapporteur, World Water Forum, Marseille, 2012, Rapporteur, UNDP (New York/Senegal, on HIV); Consultant, World Bank’s Water and Sanitation Program (WSP) South Asia, UNICEF (New Delhi, HIV); UNESCO (Paris, education); South Asian Consortium of Interdisciplinary Water Resource Studies (SaciWaters, Hyderabad, water); Ford Foundation; Sangram (Sangli, HIV advocacy); Sightsavers (UK, blindness), IPPF (UK), FPAI. My water-specific related work includes multi-media experience in writing (print, online), editing, rapporteur, photography, advocacy, research, documentation, field interviews. Therefore, my experience gives me a holistic approach to water issues.

What areas of your work in water have generated the most significant public response?
Hard to say, as most of my work was project-related, and the results were internal reports rarely communicated to me, even when I asked. However, from experience, I’d say my work for the World Bank’s Water and Sanitation Program South Asia, which included best practices worldwide and India guidance notes, as well as small projects like Women Managing Water: Inspiring Stories from South Asia, did a lot to inspire other women working at the grassroots in water issues.

What barriers are there to reporting on environment and sustainable development issues in your region (eg. lack of public interest, censorship, pressure from advertisers etc)?
When I was Assistant Editor at Times of India, Mumbai, 1990s-2003, India’s biggest national English paper, and wanted to do consistent coverage of water issues including a series, the Resident Editor dismissed me with a moan, saying, “Oh dear, you and your sunshine stories.” It was very hard to get my writing on water and development issues published, as it wasn’t considered sexy enough for the reader or advertisers. So I chose to freelance and work with people who take water and development issues seriously, and have considerable experience because of my commitment, detailed above.

What is tough to sell to editors in water/sustainable development/environment? Why do you think this is the case? Please detail with specific examples from your experience.
Newspapers are primarily in a very competitive space, and face a big threat from internet. So they tend to focus on gossip, sex, and goods advertisers want to push to push circulation. Development issues get very low priority. UNDP India has had workshops with editors and journalists in Goa, to encourage thinking on development and water issues, but it worked briefly as it was a beach junket, it is challenging to achieve long term impact.

What do you feel has been successful and unsuccessful in your work in this area? Please detail with specific examples from your experience. I’ve already explained this with specific examples above—about my unsuccessful work in Answer 3 and successful work in Answer 1.

Please present your proposals for communications and media projects. This is your chance to pitch the UN.
I have two proposals:

  • 1. I am very keen to be rapporteur to the Zaragoza Annual International Water Conference 2015. I do a great job reporting and taking photographs, and alongside, I get a comprehensive, 360 degree understanding of the issues involved.
  • 2. The Women Managing Water South Asia book (CD book) was a tremendously inspiring, life-changing experience. I am very keen to take the project further by directing an inspiring documentary film about it, because that can be understood by women and men who are illiterate and cannot read books.

You are expected to produce some work at the conference. What do you plan to do?
As mentioned, I am very keen to be rapporteur for the full conference. In addition, I am very keen to present a paper at the Media and Communications sessions on the positive and tremendously inspiring aspects of water issues that I have seen in 20 years in South Asia on Jan 16th.

>> Conference Home

About the Conference

>> Conveners and partners
>> Objectives and expected outcomes
>> Conference flyerPDF Document
>> AgendaPDF Document
>> StructurePDF Document
>> ParticipantsPDF Document

Logistics

>> Accommodation
>> Travelling to Zaragoza
>> Your stay in Zaragoza
>> Map

The vision

>> Rio+20
>> Water and sustainable development
>> Global commitments on water
>> A post-2015 global goal for water
>> Water and the Open Working Group (OWG)
>> The role of actors involved

The action

>> Capacity development
>> Financing and economic instruments
>> Governance frameworks
>> Technology

Action on…

>> Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)
>> Water Resources Management
>> Water Quality
>> Risk management

14 January: Pre-Conference Side events and Technical Visits

>> Technical visit: La Cartuja
>> Technical visit: The Ebro River Basin Authority and its Automatic System for Hydrologic Information (SAIH)
>> Technical visit: Expo + Water Park
>> New sources: Wastewater reuse
>> Local level actions in decentralized water solidarity towards the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals
>> Water Footprint Assessment
>> Technological advances and Water Policy
>> Cultivando Agua Boa Programme
>> CODIA and water and energy in LAC
>> The fulfillment of the human right to water and sanitation

15 January: Setting the scene and the context

>> Achieving sustainable water for all in LAC
>> Achieving water security for Asia and the Pacific
>> Ensuring implementation of the water-related SDGs in Europe
>> Setting the scene

16 January: Whose action?

>> Academia
>> Business
>> Civil society
>> Governments and local authorities
>> Media and Communicators

17 January: Integrating knowledge and the way forward

>> Multi-stakeholder dialogue on tools for implementation

Resources

>> Cases
>> Conference daily
>> Conference Communications ReportPDF Document
>> Discussion forum
>> Information briefs on Water and Sustainable Development
>> Interviewing conference participants
>> Overview Papers
>> Presentations from participants
>> Session Reports
>> Tool Papers
>> Toolbox
>> Twitter Activity Report
>> Video recording of sessions
>> Video interviews with conference participants


Promotional materials

>> Conference banners
>> Conference posterPDF document