Gender and Water Alliance
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File Message 29 from Wijk, Christine van: Overcoming female exclusion in Indonesia
Wijk, Christine van (2001). The Best of Two Worlds? Methodology for Participatory Assessment of Community Water Services. IRC Technical Paper Series 38, IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre, Delft, Netherlands.
Located in GWA Products / / Case studies / Case studies of the e-conference on successes and failures in Gender Mainstreaming in Integrated Water Resource Management
File Navigating Gender in African Cities. Synthesis Report (2006)
A Synthesis Report of Rapid Gender and Pro-Poor Assessments in the 17 Cities of the Water for African Cities (WAC) II Programme.
Located in GWA Products / Knowledge on gender and water
File Nicaragua: Gender Equality as a Condition for Access to Water and Sanitation
Case study from the Resource Guide on Gender and IWRM on gender, domestic water supply and sanitation and hygiene
Located in GWA Products / Knowledge on gender and water / Case studies
File Pro-poor water supply and sanitation - Nepal
Less than 80 percent of the rural population in Nepal has access to safe drinking water while less than 25 percent use sanitation facility. Inadequate access to safe water supply combined with poor environmental sanitation and personal hygiene practices is among the leading causes of diseases such as diarrhea, dysentery, worm infestation, skin diseases. The The RWSSP Experience used a participatory approach including the non-formal education, hygiene and sanitation education and support to women' s technical training. This proved to have been very effective in empowering the communities including women and seem to result in strong community ownership.
Located in Library / Case studies
File Report of the visit of the ED of GWA to Nigeria, 2008
Joke Muylwijk, GWAs Executive Director, visited Nigeria from 6 to 13 March 2008, accompanied by of Anthony Akpan, GWA Focal point for Anglophone West Africa and Hajia Salamatu Garba, GWA NIgeria Advisor. Here you found a report on all activites undertaken.
Located in GWA Activities / International and global profile
File Review of Oxfam’s Women’s WASH Platforms (2011)
This report is a review of the Women's Wash Platforms as an approach to gender issues in WASH. The WWP's are teams of women established at the village level, working within their own villages to disseminate information on water and sanitation issues, encourage ‘best practices,’ and implement small Oxfam-­‐funded projects that they design and implement themselves with the help of Oxfam staff and partners.
Located in Library / Publications
File Rural Sanitation Evaluation, Cambodia (2012)
The Adventist Development and Relief Agency Cambodia (ADRA) has been operating in the water and sanitation sector for 18 years. ADRA's program has always involved hardware coupled with software interventions. However, the biggest criticism has been the reach and impact of the program on the poorest within communities and whether ADRA should incorporate the principles and methods of Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) more directly into the way ADRA's program operates. Therefore, ADRA commissioned this study to identify lessons learned from other programs and how and if these lessons and methods of implementing latrine programs should be considered for integration into ADRA's program.
Located in Library / Reports
SACOSAN 2003
From 21-23 October 2003, the South Asian Conference on Sanitation took place in Dhaka Bangladesh. GWA presented a keynote "Sanitation, Hygiene and Gender", Rose Lidonde (a GWA representative) was interviewed and GWA materials were distributed. A joint SACOSAN declaration was developed by ministers and high civil servants representing the nine participating countries (Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka) in the South of Asia.
Located in GWA Activities / International and global profile
SACOSAN 2006
Three years after the first South Asian Conference on Sanitation which was held in Dhaka, Bangladesh, the second SACOSAN took place from 20-21 September 2006 in Islamabad, Pakistan. The executive director of GWA was invited by the Ministry of Environment of Pakistan to speak about “A Gender Approach to Sanitation – Empowerment of Women, Men and Children” in a Gender and Sanitation Session.
Located in GWA Activities / International and global profile
Sanitation for the urban poor, partnerships and governance, IRC, 2008
IRC Symposium: Sanitation for the urban poor, Partnerships and Governance, 19-21 november 2008, Delft, The Netherlands
Located in Library / Conferences
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