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Systems Reboot: Sanitation Sector Change in Maputo and Lusaka



rapport Nov 2019 ; 29 pages
Aut. Sam Drabble & Rosie Renouf & Jonathan Stokes & Yaver Abidi
Ed. WSUP - London
Téléchargeable sous format: PdF (8 600 ko)
Téléchargeable chez l'éditeur
Site internet: https://www.wsup.com/insights/systems-reboot-sanitation-sector-change-in-maputo-and-lusaka/

Abstract:
In one in seven countries, access to basic sanitation is decreasing. Even in cities, where access to safely managed sanitation is more prevalent than in rural areas, gaps between the rich and the poor continue to be stark.

But what does this look like at a city level?

This Discussion Paper contributes provides illustrative examples of how a systems approach can be applied at a city level by looking at two cities – Lusaka, Zambia and Maputo, Mozambique – that have experienced positive change in their on-site sanitation sector over the last decade.

Each case study contains an in-depth examination of one particular component of the system that was identified by stakeholders as being particularly crucial: a community-based, utility-managed faecal sludge management (FSM) service in Lusaka, and the design of a sanitation tariff in Maputo.

Mots clefs:

assainissement (CI) (DT) (OP) , boues (gestion des ) (CI) (DT) (OP) , financement (CI) (DT) (OP)

Pays concernés:

Mozambique (CI) (DT) (OP) , Zambie (CI) (DT) (OP)

Editeur/Diffuseur:

WSUP - Water and Sanitation for the Urban Poor - London - Royaume Uni
    

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