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The international commitment to provide basic services for all has yet to be achieved for a high percentage of the urban poor. Residents of densely crowded settlements endure the indignity, shame and sickness that lack of sanitation produces. Improved sanitation will provide real benefits to the lives and livelihoods of the poor. Yet, despite the health benefits, sanitation investments are not high on the household expenditure priorities of the urban poor and those most affected, especially women and children, are least able to express their demands and ensure access to sustained and safe sanitation.
What are the links between poverty, gender and sanitation? What are the key problems in sanitation delivery and how can they be overcome? Southampton University, UK, is carrying out research in Kolkata, India and Dhaka, Bangladesh with local people and the agencies involved in sanitation delivery. The research aims to establish clear working principles as the basis for more effective sanitation interventions for poor urban communities.
Recent research in India found that the benefits of improvements to infrastructure in urban slums often failed to reach those most in need. Historically, attempts to identify the sanitation needs of urban poor communities have been limited by the range of available solutions, determined by project agendas, which do not take into account the diversity and resulting inequity in urban poor neighbourhoods. Equally, research of Slum Improvement Projects in South Asia, showed that access to resources and services was biased towards those best placed to participate in and control project-established groups.
As sanitation policies evolve, the approach to gender remains the same – ‘involving women in pre-determined project activities’. Little thought is paid to how:
There is increasing agreement that achieving sustainable improvements in sanitation and hygiene for the urban poor requires strong political will and changed attitudes to poverty and gender in the responsible institutions. Considering the relationships between sanitation, gender and livelihood strategies will help the investigation of how gender roles and sanitation provision impact on household economies. Focusing on these links would make it easier to identify the real problems of the most powerless among the poor and hopefully better inform the move away from mechanistic forms of community participation. But how can this be achieved?
The study aims to develop a clear understanding of:
This research is based on the understanding that a significant proportion of the urban poor, and especially women amongst them, is unable to take part in municipal planning and action. With this in mind, the research agenda will ensure that:
Source(s):
Project Inception Report and forthcoming articles Full document.
id21 Research Highlight: 10 March 2003
Further Information:
Deepa Joshi
Institute of Irrigation and Development Studies
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
University of Southampton
Southampton
SO17 1BJ
UK
Tel:
+44 (0)23 8059 2793
Contact the contributor: dj1@soton.ac.uk
Ben Fawcett
Institute of Irrigation and Development Studies
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
University of Southampton
Southampton
SO17 1BJ
UK
Tel:
+44 (0)23 8059 2793
Contact the contributor: bnf@soton.ac.uk
Other related links:
'New roles, new rules: does private sector participation benefit the poor?'
'Politics and provision On-the-ground realities of water and sanitation
development'
'Soap: the missing ingredient in the water and sanitation mix'
'Transforming with technology in India'
'Can social marketing increase demand and uptake of sanitation?'
'Subsidy or self-respect? Lessons from Bangladesh'
'South Africa’s ‘World in one country’ experience'