Ensuring Sustained Beneficial Outcomes for Water and Sanitation Programmes in the Developing World

Updated - Tuesday 19 August 2008

Brian Mathew (2005)

The two objectives of this document are firstly to suggest approaches to achieve sustained beneficial outcomes from WATSAN, and secondly how to ‘scale up’ application of these approaches, so that they impact positively on the lives of the millions of people who live without safe water or adequate sanitation.To discover what these approaches are the literature is examined and practical lessons are drawn from two WATSAN programmes in East and Central Africa.

The conclusions are presented in the form of a Charter for the Sustainable Development of WATSAN, with nine clauses to guide project and programme managers through the issues that need to be taken into account in this most important of development sectors.The charter’s clauses guide the reader through various stages of WATSAN development, through participatory project identification, need and demand response, sustainable environmental approaches, structured health education, staffing issues, decentralisation, and the practicalities of policy, allowing work to progress at the speed that communities need to acquire ownership whilst at the same time scaling up programme implementation to make a meaningful impact on the MDGs.

The global issues of financing the MDGs are also assessed, and the conclusion is that meeting the MDGs is possible in a sustainable manner. However, this will only succeed if there is a massive shift in the resources allocated towards those really in need, and a change in the attitudes of the political power brokers to allow this, promoting quality work, to be implemented by integrated teams, in a process-orientated, ethos-driven way, with WATSAN set as a keystone of wider human development.

Only available as a free PDF.

- Download:
OP40-E.pdf (1.3 MB)
- Series:
Occasional Paper Series no. 40, 223 p.

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