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Arghyam

Live feed: WSSCC Global Forum on Sanitation & Hygiene - 9-14 October 2011, Mumbai

WSCC Global Forum on Sanitation and Hygiene

We all know the statistics: 2.6 billion people around the world are without access to a basic toilet. Diarrhoea – the vast majority of it due to poor sanitation and hygiene – is the second biggest killer of children worldwide.

Between us, we also have many of the answers. We have experiences of low-cost technologies that are acceptable and affordable for poor communities in rural areas. We have been involved in designing communications programmes that have contributed to sustained behaviour change.

We have seen governments and civil society working together to set up policies and programmes that ensure access to better sanitation in challenging settings, such as crowded informal settlements in fast-growing megacities. We have also seen businesses grow up around sanitation and hygiene, allowing individuals to make a dignified living and clients to buy the sorts of products and services they want and need.

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Media Kit - WSSCC Global Forum on Sanitation and Hygiene458.32 KB

Oh Crap! Where’s the one potty per household project? - Article from TechSangam

Article and Image courtesy: TechSangam
Author: Vishy

I spent a few hours with the Arghyam management team - Sunita Nadhamuni (CEO) and Vijay Krishna (Director, R&D and head of India Water Portal (one of Arghyam's key offerings)). Arghyam is an Indian public charitable foundation setup with an endowment from Rohini Nilekani, working in the water and sanitation sector since 2005. Sunita, Vijay and I are collaborators and friends from Silicon Valley during our Rejuvenate India Movement days (circa 1999-2003). This is the first of a multi-part series on Arghyam focusing on ASHWAS. The acronym ASHWAS, which expands to A Survey of Household Water and Sanitation, refers to a participatory survey that covers 28 districts of Karnataka spanning 17,200 households across 172 gram panchayats (GPs) - the only Karnataka district excluded in this study is Bangalore Urban.

82% of Gram Panchayats reported presence of toilets in all schools but ASHWAS surveyors found most to be defunct Read More

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Draft Strategic Plan 2010-2022, for Rural Drinking Water - Comments requested by DDWS (MoRD) by 31 January 2011

Forwarded to the portal by: Sujoy Majumdar, DDWS through the Solution Exchange Water Community

Department of Drinking Water and SanitationThe Department of Drinking Water and Sanitation (DDWS), Ministry of Rural Development, has finalized a draft of its Strategic Plan (2010-22) and is inviting comments from the public, to finalise the draft. Read More

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Department of Drinking Water and Sanitation – Rural Drinking Water - Draft Strategic Plan (2010-2022) - Comments requested by 31 Jan 2011561.75 KB

Civil society consultations for the 12th Five Year Plan Approach Paper: Urban & Rural WATSAN sector

At the request of the Planning Commission, Arghyam and WaterAid agreed to co-ordinate and support a process of civil society consultation for inputs on rural and urban domestic water and sanitation for generating recommendations for the Approach Paper to the 12th Five Year Plan of the Government of India.

A glimpse of the audienceRead More

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Recommendations to the Planning Commission-inputs to the 12th FYP approach paper on rural WATSAN633.33 KB
Summary of the regional proceedings-rural consultations332.07 KB
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Water conservation - A question of will

Article and Image Courtesy: Deccan Herald

When a family in Mudhol taluk decided not to depend on government schemes and instead built a tank with their hard-earned money, the water table shot up and borewells in the vicinity were recharged. Elsewhere, another village in Tumkur district has quietly gone on to become a 100 pc rainwater harvesting dependent one.

Sustainable Projects: The tank constructed by the Gujjannavar family in Mudhol talukRead More

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Takeaways from NEERI brainstorming workshop - Water technology developers and other stakeholders

Guest Post by Vijay Krishna (Director, R&D and India Water Portal - Arghyam)

The National Environment Engineering Research Institute (NEERI) is a premier CSIR laboratory. On September 7th, NEERI held a brainstorming workshop entitled "Interface between water technology developers and other stakeholders”.  The purpose of the workshop was to engage better with other players involved with bringing scientific innovation in the water sector to reach large numbers of people who need the innovations.  Attendees included scientists from many CSIR laboratories involved with water research, senior central government officials from the Rural Water Supply Department and the Dept of Science and Technology, State government officials, representatives from leading corporate houses including Eureka Forbes and Unilever and NGOs.  Read More

Tanking up - India Today Cover Story : Spirit of India - Environment

Article and Image Courtesy: India Today

He’s known as much for his Karl Marx beard as his sobriquet. The water warrior from Gaya, 97 km south of Patna, is the resident agony uncle, with people flocking to him for advice on life and work.

The post-graduate in sociology who has refused a number of teaching jobs only to become a “rarely paid” freelance journalist is an unlikely hero.Read More

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WaterCube.tv at the World Water Week 2010

Article Courtesy: Akvo

The second ever Stockholm World Water Cube. This is our chance to turn inside-out what an international conference and water and sanitation should be all about.

WaterCube.tv is a unique video project to document people working to tackle the problems billions face getting access to clean water and proper sanitation.

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