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Water-supply, Rural --- Social aspects --- Rural water-supply --- Sanitation, Rural
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Water-supply, Rural. --- Rural water-supply --- Sanitation, Rural
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This manual and the free downloadable costing tool is the outcome of a project identified by the Water, Sanitation and Health Programme (WSH) of the World Health Organization (WHO) faced with the challenge of costing options for improved access, both to safe drinking water and to adequate sanitation. Although limited in scope to the process of costing safe water supply technologies, a proper use of this material lies within a larger setting considering the cultural, environmental, institutional, political and social conditions that should be used by policy decision makers in developing countries to promote sustainable development strategies. Costing Improved Water Supply Systems for Low-income Communities provides practical guidance to facilitate and standardize the implementation of social life-cycle costing to "improved" drinking-water supply technologies. These technologies have been defined by the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation, as those that, by the nature of its construction, adequately protect the source of water from outside contamination, in particular with faecal matter. The conceptual framework used has also been conceived to be applied to costing improved sanitation options. To facilitate the application of the costing method to actual projects, a basic tool was developed using Microsoft Excel, which is called a water supply costing processor. It enables a user-friendly implementation of all the tasks involved in a social life-cycle costing process and provides both the detailed and the consolidated cost figures that are needed by decision-makers. The scope and the limits of the costing method in a real setting was assessed through field tests designed and performed by local practitioners in selected countries. These tests were carried out in Peru and in six countries in the WHO regions of South-East Asia and the Western Pacific. They identified practical issues in using the manual and the water supply costing processor and provided practical recommendations.
Water-supply, Rural. --- Rural water-supply --- Sanitation, Rural
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Exclusion and inequitable access to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) services and opportunities are major concerns to development practitioners. The job of providing water for the household invariably falls on women, often at the expense of their education, income-earning opportunities and social, cultural and political involvement. This book aims to unpack the key elements of the WASH-gender nexus, examine these and recommend ways ahead for improved gender outcomes and WASH impact in India.
Water-supply, Rural --- Women in rural development --- Sanitation, Rural --- Rural sanitation --- Rural health --- Rural development --- Women volunteers in social service --- Rural water-supply --- Management --- Citizen participation
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"A story of her small family farm in Colorado with history of water policy in the state and the science and law of water resources in the West. Addressing the deepening need for urban-rural cooperation, dispelling misconceptions and shares essential background knowledge about farms, food and water"--Provided by publisher.
Water-supply, Rural --- Water resources development --- Women environmentalists --- History. --- D'Elgin, Tershia. --- Environmentalists --- Women scientists --- Energy development --- Natural resources --- Water-supply --- Rural water-supply --- Sanitation, Rural
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Water resources development --- Water-supply, Rural --- Law and legislation --- Finance --- United States. --- Mni Wiconi Rural Water Supply Project (U.S.). --- Water-supply --- Water-supply, rural --- Nature --- Technology & engineering
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Water-supply, Rural --- Water resources development --- Finance. --- Finance --- Law and legislation --- Mni Wiconi Rural Water Supply Project (U.S.) --- Appropriations and expenditures.
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The Punjab province has seen visible and laudable improvements in the quantum of water supply and sanitation services available to its citizens in the past decades. In the water supply sector, the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) targets have either already been met (notably in the rural water sector) or coverage is significant. In the sanitation sector, the achievements are less impressive, highlighting it as a neglected sector. There has also been steady progress in the development of policy frameworks, using national policies and guidelines as a touchstone. However, while prima facie progress would appear to be solid, the study reveals that, in fact, achievements are fragile, and serious structural issues threaten to undermine progress in the sector. Further, the quality of service is assessed as poor, with limited recourse for customers. Institutional fragmentation, piecemeal and heavily politicized planning efforts with little cohesion, and heavy and misdirected subsidies mark the sector, and negate sustainability. Evidence indicates that the gains of the past decades are likely to be reversed, and MDG targets will in fact not be met, should these issues not be addressed as a matter of urgency. As Pakistan and Punjab province move towards newly elected governments, there is an opportunity for spearheading reform. The 18th Constitutional Amendment has already given the province control of the sector. An important water Act lies on the anvil and passing this could put in place the framework for developing a coherent sector-wide approach, and provide legal impetus for the creation of a regulatory authority. This will be an important starting point for addressing the structural flaws, which currently beset the sector. This Service Delivery Assessment (SDA) has been produced in collaboration with the Government of Punjab and other stakeholders.
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With 2.1 billion people - mostly in rural areas - lacking safely managed drinking water and reported low rural water supply functionality rates, the Sustainable Development Goals pose a triple challenge: to reach unserved mostly rural population groups, to raise service levels, and to sustain existing and future services. This assessment uses a multi-country case study approach to identify good practices and challenges toward building sector capacity and strengthening sustainable service delivery models for rural areas. Recognizing the limitations of the Demand Responsive Approach, the emergence of various management models, the identified need for ongoing support to rural service providers, and the critical role of enabling institutions and policies beyond the community-level, the added value of this assessment lies in: i)the development of a comprehensive analytical framework that can be used to analyze and operationalize a more sustainable service delivery approach for rural water supply; ii) the rich set of cases and good practices from the 16 countries informing the global body of "knowledge in implementation," and iii) the formulation of recommendations and policy directions to improve the sustainability of services depending on sector development stage. Policy recommendations are centered around five areas: institutional capacity, financing, asset management, water resources management, and monitoring and regulatory oversight.
Environment --- Rural Development --- Rural Water --- Rural Water Supply and Sanitation --- Sustainability --- Water Education --- Water Resource Management --- Water Resources --- Water Resources Management --- Water Supply and Sanitation
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The report confirms that groundwater, if managed sustainably, can be an important development resource across the Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) region. The report presents data related to groundwater resource characteristics and highlights the opportunities and challenges presented in promoting sustainable and resilient groundwater development in the region. Groundwater has significant potential to support human and economic development in SSA, as it has done in other global regions. The report recommends investment in expanding groundwater development as an integral component of national water resources strategy for countries in SSA. Investment in groundwater can be financially viable and a wise policy option to support socioeconomic development if safeguards specific to groundwater are incorporated into investmentprograms. The expansion should be designed within a sustainable framework responsive to thespecial social and cultural and economic features of groundwater resources, compounded bytheir special hydrological, environmental and engineering dimensions to guide sustainabledevelopment of this important component of water resources.
Drought Management --- Groundwater --- Hydrology --- Infrastructure Investment --- Rural Water Supply And Sanitation --- Urban Water Supply And Sanitation --- Water Resources --- Water Supply And Sanitation
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