Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) target 6.2 calls for ‘adequate and equitable sanitation for all’. In dense, rapidly urbanising cities, the challenge of providing household sanitation means that many countries include shared, community and public toilets in their national strategies to meet global goals. However, shared sanitation is associated with several problems including poor management and exclusion. This study examines shared sanitation access and use by using innovative mapping methods in compound house units in Fante New Town, Kumasi, Ghana. This study reveals that 56% of house units have at least one toilet. Of the 47% of people living in these house units, almost a third were excluded from using the toilet. Tenure status was th...
While household access to private toilets is the long-term goal in Kumasi, Ghana, it is still far fr...
Innovative sanitation programmes such as Community Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) or sanitation marketi...
Shared sanitation is not currently accepted within the international normative definitions of "basic...
Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) target 6.2 calls for ‘adequate and equitable sanitation for all’....
In Ghana, over 70% of urban dwellers do not have private sanitation facilities in their home and rel...
In Ghana, over 70% of urban dwellers do not have private sanitation facilities in their home and rel...
Shared sanitation facilities (SSFs) have contributed considerably to sanitation access in many low-i...
With growing worldwide urbanisation, ensuring adequate sanitation for all urban citizens is gaining ...
This paper discusses the notions of 'improved' and 'unimproved' sanitation in the context of develop...
In low income urban areas where a majority of houses do not have toilets, shared toilets are often s...
Supplementary files for article Stakeholder acceptance of shared toilets to improve sanitation acces...
Demand-responsive sanitation acknowledges the need for sanitation development to be household-centre...
While shared sanitation is the most viable sanitation option for slums, evidence shows that slum san...
Per current WHO/UNICEF JMP definition, improved sanitation facilities are those that are likely to e...
In recent years, shared facilities have contributed substantially to increased access to sanitation ...
While household access to private toilets is the long-term goal in Kumasi, Ghana, it is still far fr...
Innovative sanitation programmes such as Community Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) or sanitation marketi...
Shared sanitation is not currently accepted within the international normative definitions of "basic...
Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) target 6.2 calls for ‘adequate and equitable sanitation for all’....
In Ghana, over 70% of urban dwellers do not have private sanitation facilities in their home and rel...
In Ghana, over 70% of urban dwellers do not have private sanitation facilities in their home and rel...
Shared sanitation facilities (SSFs) have contributed considerably to sanitation access in many low-i...
With growing worldwide urbanisation, ensuring adequate sanitation for all urban citizens is gaining ...
This paper discusses the notions of 'improved' and 'unimproved' sanitation in the context of develop...
In low income urban areas where a majority of houses do not have toilets, shared toilets are often s...
Supplementary files for article Stakeholder acceptance of shared toilets to improve sanitation acces...
Demand-responsive sanitation acknowledges the need for sanitation development to be household-centre...
While shared sanitation is the most viable sanitation option for slums, evidence shows that slum san...
Per current WHO/UNICEF JMP definition, improved sanitation facilities are those that are likely to e...
In recent years, shared facilities have contributed substantially to increased access to sanitation ...
While household access to private toilets is the long-term goal in Kumasi, Ghana, it is still far fr...
Innovative sanitation programmes such as Community Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) or sanitation marketi...
Shared sanitation is not currently accepted within the international normative definitions of "basic...