Issue 36 : Capacity development for water and sanitation

This issue of Capacity.org looks at the capacities that need to be developed in order for the water and sanitation targets for 2015 to be achievable. The main focus is on capacity needs at the intermediate and local levels, but links between macro-level policy making and local-level implementation are also addressed.

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‘More MDGs per drop’

29 October 2010

Top-down approach water programmes assume people use water for a single purpose. A ‘multiple-use water services’ approach can unleash massive productive capacity in households and communities.

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Barbara van Koppen, Southern Africa Regional Program International Water Management Institute Pretoria, South Africa

Water access and sanitation in Ethiopia

29 October 2010

The water and sanitation targets of Ethiopia’s Universal Access Plan are to be reached by 2012. Heinz Greijn talks with Mr Abebe Ayenew of Ethiopia’s Ministry of Water Resources about strategies for achieving this goal.

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Mr Abebe Ayenew, Director of research and development at the Ministry of Water Resources, Addi Ababt, Ethiopia

The importance of public awareness

29 October 2010

The developed country model for building capacity in water supply, sanitation and hygiene is inadequate for Asia, Africa and Latin America. Developing countries require a different approach.

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Eric O. Odada, professor of Earth Sciences at the University of Nairobi, Kenya and a member of the United Nations Secretary General’s Advisory Board (UNSGAB) on Water and Sanitation.

Involving communities

29 October 2010

Agencies and national governments are increasingly involving local communities when developing water and sanitation systems. Despite this, the functionality of systems in East and Southern Africa remain weak.

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Search Terms:
policy
casestudies
community empowerment
africa
rural development
Jackson Wandera, SNV
Ruud Glotzbach, Netherlands Development Organisation (SNV)

Improving district level leadership

29 October 2010

Uganda is a frontrunner in East Africa in water and sanitation reforms, but it is struggling to achieve its sanitation and hygiene-related Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). More district level leadership is needed.

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Brecht Mommen, SNV Uganda
Patience Turyareeba, SNV Uganda
Carmen da Silva Wells, IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre, the Netherlands

Capacity needs for water and sanitation

29 October 2010

Trachoma is an eye disease caused by poor sanitation and hygiene. Flies spread the disease in areas where people openly defecate. Trachoma can develop into trichiasis, which, without surgery, can cause blindness. In some regions of Ethiopia over 50% of the rural population is infected with trachoma, and over 5% suffers from trichiasis.

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Heinz Greijn, Editor in Chief

Beyond training

29 October 2010

‘Capacity development’ means different things to different people. However, it is generally considered essential to achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) relating to water and sanitation. The slow spread of safe water and sanitation is commonly attributed to a shortage of skilled people. Hence capacity development is predominantly associated with training staff in constructing physical assets such as toilets and water systems, particularly but not only in rural areas.

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Ravi Narayanan, Vice chair of the Asia-Pacific Water Forum (APWF) and former chief executive of WaterAid.

Achieving MDGs

29 October 2010

Meeting capacity needs is essential to achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). But these needs must be understood in the context of the wider environment in which practitioners work.

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James Winpenny, Independent economic consultant, water sector

A beauty contest for toilets

29 October 2010

A beauty contest for toilets

Providing sufficient toilet access is key to meeting health and sanitation targets. But it is difficult to ensure that facilities are used properly and maintained.

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Shyama V. Ramani (Friend-in-Need (FIN) Trust, India)

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