Going to Scale with Community-Led Total Sanitation: Reflections on Experience, Issues and Ways Forward
Author: Robert Chambers
Date: 2009
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52 pages
(384 KB)
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How can Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) be scaled up to address open defecation (OD) and its resulting health problems? This paper, published by the Institute of Development Studies, draws on cases from Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Pakistan, Ethiopia and Kenya to highlight learning points. A crucial component in bringing this revolutionary, participatory approach to more of the 2 billion people living with OD involves finding, supporting and multiplying champions.
Widespread OD has continued despite decades of rural sanitation programmes, many of them centred on the concept of hardware subsidies. For example, governments and NGOs have provided free toilets in many communities, despite indications that as many as half of them are not being used. CLTS, barely a decade old, provokes communities into making their own analyses and appraisals, and charges them with the goal of declaring themselves OD-free (ODF). Communities come to understand through participatory mapping, transect walks and other methods that OD leads to poor health, triggering community resolve to change the situation. The potential benefits of CLTS are particularly significant for women and children, whose health is the most adversely affected by OD.
A number of best practices can be identified by the array of ongoing CLTS experiments. Initial start-up variables are crucial, including proper training and facilitation at an early stage and an emphasis on promoting teamwork and leadership. Fruitful approaches have also included: conducting campaigns and encouraging competition; inspiring and empowering children, youth and schools; making use of the market and promoting access to hardware; and verifying and certifying ODF status. Other findings include the following:
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Source:
Chambers, R., 2009, 'Going to Scale with Community-Led Total Sanitation: Reflections on Experience, Issues and Ways Forward', IDS Practice Paper, Volume 2009, Number 1, Institute of Development Studies, Brighton
Author:
Institute of Development Studies , http://www.ids.ac.uk