 I did my research in Zambia for my thesis and I was trying to understand the gender norms. So how do men, women, children and different sections of the society perceive water issues differently. So it was more about me living in a very small remote village in Zambia and trying to understand the issues and it was very real like in that study I realized something like it's not just the experts who are who know who can diagnose a water issue but also the people who are going undergoing a problem they are also the one who have equal say and weightage in what exactly the issue is. My research is at a nexus of social sciences and technical science so it goes more into water provisioning but water access. So how do men, women, children have access to water differently and these looking at water problem through gender lens is very relevant and actually very urgent in our societies because it's not just the experts who can diagnose a water problem but also the real people who are more connected to the issue and their voices and what do they think and what do they feel is the real problem. So it's not just relevant but it's very urgent.