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Water and Sanitation

Liquid Dynamics: Rethinking sustainability in water and sanitation- A paper highlighting the various interactions around water

This paper begins with the slow rate of progress in achieving the millennium development goals of environmental sustainability, especially in the areas of water and sanitation. This is due to the disconnect between the global rhetoric (which often focuses on water as an economic good) and social realities (such as the cultural attitudes towards water)

cover illustration of Liquid Dynamics showing two girls in a paddy fieldRead More

Tools and strategies for inclusion of marginalized in Water and Sanitation - Experiences; Examples

From Sandhya Venkateswaran, UNICEF, New Delhi

Posted 15 July 2011

Increasing attention is being given to India’s journey on a high growth path and the simultaneous exclusion of some communities from the processes and benefits of this development. UNICEF, in its current Country Programme, has decided to explicitly focus on reducing social exclusion. Under this, it aims to understand and address the underlying processes that result in economic and social deprivations, so that the services reach and benefit the most marginalized. While blanket programmes are good to reach the entire country, they usually leave out migrants, SC/STs, Dalits and also often fail to satisfy the needs of women.

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Tools and strategies for inclusion of marginalized in Water and Sanitation - Experiences; Examples174.01 KB

Material to generate demand for WASH micro-loan products – Experiences; Advice

From Sireesha Patnaik, Friends of Women World Banking, Ahmedabad

Posted 27 May 2011

I work with Friends of Women World Banking (FWWB), on Water and Sanitation which is a pan-India programme. Currently, we partner with six microfinance institutions in Madhya Pradesh, Orissa, Maharashtra, Karnataka, and Uttarakhand and have been able to touch lives of about 2,000 women beneficiaries and their households in providing access to water and sanitation.

FWWB-India initiated interventions on infrastructure credit in 2000, that gained momentum in 2008 – 09 with the launch of FWWB-I’s Water and Sanitation ‘WATSAN’ Programme. The main objective of the programme is to improve the overall quality of life of women by facilitating access to water and sanitation through credit services and creating awareness on hygiene and sanitation through our partners.Read More

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Material to generate demand for WASH micro-loan products – Experiences; Advice171 KB

Monitoring system for incentive programs – Learning from large-scale rural sanitation initiatives in India – A report by the Water and Sanitation Programme

WSPThis report is a part of the Global Scaling Up Rural Sanitation project of the Water and Sanitation Programme, World Bank and focuses on learning how to combine the approaches of Community Led Total Sanitation (CLTS), behavior change communications, and social marketing of sanitation to generate sanitation demand and strengthen the supply of sanitation products and services at scale, leading to improved health for people in rural areas. It is a large-scale effort to meet the basic sanitation needs of the rural people who do not currently have access to safe and hygienic sanitation. This report is one in a series of knowledge products designed to showcase project findings, assessments and lessons learned in the project.

Over the last few years, the concept of open-defecation free communities has emerged as one of the building blocks toward achieving total sanitation. The term ‘access’ is widely used to capture increase in sanitation usage. However, a clean environment is a public good. Hence, there was a need to achieve total sanitation at the community level to realize public health benefits. This has led policy makers and practitioners to adopt strategies that achieve community-wide total sanitation status, which includes the community becoming open-defecation free, and adopting safe hygiene and environmental sanitation practices.

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Monitoring system for incentive programs – Learning from large-scale rural sanitation initiatives in India – A report by the Water and Sanitation Programme (2010)1.15 MB

Location

Solan, HP, India
Latitude: 30.903960, Longitude: 77.096943

The economic impacts of inadequate sanitation in India: Rs. 2.4 Trillion equivalent of 6.4 per cent of GDP – A report by WSP

This study report by the Water and Sanitation Programme (WSP), a global partnership administered by the World Bank suggests that inadequate sanitation causes India considerable economic losses, equivalent to 6.4 per cent of India's GDP in 2006 at Rs. 2.4 Trillion. It analyzed the evidence on the adverse economic impacts of inadequate sanitation, which include costs associated with death and disease, accessing and treating water, and losses in education, productivity, time, and tourism. The findings are based on 2006 figures, although a similar magnitude of losses is likely in later years.

The study focused on the safe management of human excreta and associated hygiene behavior. The methodology adopted by the study included disaggregating the economic impacts of inadequate sanitation into health-related impacts including premature deaths, costs of treating diseases, and productive time lost due to illnesses; domestic water-related impacts including household treatment of water, and money and time costs to obtain safe water; welfare losses including additional time spent by people for accessing toilets or open defecation sites, and girls having to miss school, and women not going to work; and the loss of potential tourism owing to inadequate sanitation.

Data on incidence (e.g. diarrheal diseases, deaths, etc.) were compiled from national sources (National Family Health Survey, WHO Demographic and Health Surveys, and other Govt. of India sources). Based on scientific literature, attribution factors were used to estimate the populations impacted by inadequate sanitation. Economic valuation was carried out using costs/prices based on secondary studies.Read More

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