Enormous progress has been made in the global effort to provide safe and affordable toilets for the world’s poorest citizens since World Toilet Day was first declared in 2001. Significant strides have been made in “reinventing” toilet designs for low-income, water-short, un-sewered urban zones; celebrities such as Bill Gates and Matt Damon have brought this once-taboo topic into the open; and the Prime Minister of India – the country with the highest number of people still practicing open defecation – has publicly declared that his country needs toilets over temples. Well over 2 billion people today lack access to basic sanitation facilities, according to the World Health Organization; about 760 million of them live in India. The goal of th...
It’s 2014. So why do we still need World Toilet Day? Because 2.5 billion people still need one. Worl...
Despite India’s advancements in development and industry, it is also the nation with the greatest pr...
Sanitation hinders overall development process and poor sanitation practices deprive human access to...
12-20Even today a third of the world does not have access to basic sanitation, resulting in water an...
Lack of adequate sanitation is a pressing challenge in both rural and urban India. Sanitation-relate...
the harsh reality of health inequality gap between the poor and rich countries. I would like to add ...
Of all the countries in the world, India has the highest number of people practicing open defecation...
Across India, 4,19,092 toilets need to be built or repaired to ensure 100% sanitation coverage in sc...
India facing economic loss because of poor hygiene and sanitation in the country. Nearly 60 per cent...
Sanitation is at the heart of not only environmental security but also food security and health. Abo...
“Sanitation for all” remains a challenge. In India, the national policies and programmes focussed on...
Human feces contains ten million viruses, one million bacteria, and 1,000 parasitic cysts, contribut...
In the latest post of our SDGs series (with Africa at LSE and the IGC), Britta Augsburg and Paul Rod...
When human waste (feces) is not managed well, it pollutes water, food, and soil with germs and leads...
The desire for the toilet, one of the most basic of facilities, is expressed by many throughout Indi...
It’s 2014. So why do we still need World Toilet Day? Because 2.5 billion people still need one. Worl...
Despite India’s advancements in development and industry, it is also the nation with the greatest pr...
Sanitation hinders overall development process and poor sanitation practices deprive human access to...
12-20Even today a third of the world does not have access to basic sanitation, resulting in water an...
Lack of adequate sanitation is a pressing challenge in both rural and urban India. Sanitation-relate...
the harsh reality of health inequality gap between the poor and rich countries. I would like to add ...
Of all the countries in the world, India has the highest number of people practicing open defecation...
Across India, 4,19,092 toilets need to be built or repaired to ensure 100% sanitation coverage in sc...
India facing economic loss because of poor hygiene and sanitation in the country. Nearly 60 per cent...
Sanitation is at the heart of not only environmental security but also food security and health. Abo...
“Sanitation for all” remains a challenge. In India, the national policies and programmes focussed on...
Human feces contains ten million viruses, one million bacteria, and 1,000 parasitic cysts, contribut...
In the latest post of our SDGs series (with Africa at LSE and the IGC), Britta Augsburg and Paul Rod...
When human waste (feces) is not managed well, it pollutes water, food, and soil with germs and leads...
The desire for the toilet, one of the most basic of facilities, is expressed by many throughout Indi...
It’s 2014. So why do we still need World Toilet Day? Because 2.5 billion people still need one. Worl...
Despite India’s advancements in development and industry, it is also the nation with the greatest pr...
Sanitation hinders overall development process and poor sanitation practices deprive human access to...