In 2016, the Ministry of Drinking Water and Sanitation(MDWS), Government of India (GoI) empanelled competent organizations and individuals to offer on-demand capacity building support and guidance on community wide approaches for sanitation to different districts and states in India. The Water Supply & Sanitation Collaborative Council (WSSCC) is an UN agency and as an empanelled organization for training works closely with the district of Saharanpur towards making it an ODF district. Constantly looking for innovative ways to influence behaviour change, WSSCC deployed new tools of stunting and menstruation to galvanize communities to make Saharanpur an open defecation free district of Uttar Pradesh. It showed startling success in the distric...
Poor sanitation exacerbates adverse health outcomes such as infectious disease, diarrhea and childho...
This research brief provides background on the consequences of fecal contamination in household envi...
In 2016, nearly 60% of the population of India practiced open defecation (OD), which was 4 times the...
Sanitation is has always been an agenda since very beginning after Independence In 1986 that the gov...
Preferring Community Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) for sustainable and large scale sanitation coverage...
From what was once the most hard to reform district in terms of sanitation coverage, to declaring it...
“Sabar Shouchagar”, meaning “toilets for all” a thought that was later actualized by the district le...
CLTS focuses on trigger commitment to ending open defecation. But what do you do when communities pr...
The Pusa Block of Samastipur District in the Indian State of Bihar accounted for very low sanitation...
BACKGROUND: Despite efforts to eradicate it, open defecation remains widely practiced in India, espe...
In India, the national goal is to provide every rural person with adequate water for drinking and co...
In 2011, India had more phone users (around 54 per cent of households) and television access (33 per...
Emerging evidence in Rajasthan, a State with a population of 68.5million shows that scaled-up improv...
Burdwan District of West Bengal is considered to be both the ‘Granary of Bengal' and the ‘Ruhr of Be...
India is the largest contributor in pulling down the MDG targets around sanitation. Within India, Ma...
Poor sanitation exacerbates adverse health outcomes such as infectious disease, diarrhea and childho...
This research brief provides background on the consequences of fecal contamination in household envi...
In 2016, nearly 60% of the population of India practiced open defecation (OD), which was 4 times the...
Sanitation is has always been an agenda since very beginning after Independence In 1986 that the gov...
Preferring Community Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) for sustainable and large scale sanitation coverage...
From what was once the most hard to reform district in terms of sanitation coverage, to declaring it...
“Sabar Shouchagar”, meaning “toilets for all” a thought that was later actualized by the district le...
CLTS focuses on trigger commitment to ending open defecation. But what do you do when communities pr...
The Pusa Block of Samastipur District in the Indian State of Bihar accounted for very low sanitation...
BACKGROUND: Despite efforts to eradicate it, open defecation remains widely practiced in India, espe...
In India, the national goal is to provide every rural person with adequate water for drinking and co...
In 2011, India had more phone users (around 54 per cent of households) and television access (33 per...
Emerging evidence in Rajasthan, a State with a population of 68.5million shows that scaled-up improv...
Burdwan District of West Bengal is considered to be both the ‘Granary of Bengal' and the ‘Ruhr of Be...
India is the largest contributor in pulling down the MDG targets around sanitation. Within India, Ma...
Poor sanitation exacerbates adverse health outcomes such as infectious disease, diarrhea and childho...
This research brief provides background on the consequences of fecal contamination in household envi...
In 2016, nearly 60% of the population of India practiced open defecation (OD), which was 4 times the...