The project will result in a working paper on challenges and actionable solutions to equitable access to sanitation services in struggling and emerging cities in the global South. The paper is part of the World Resources Report (WRR), Towards a More Equal City. The report examines whether equitable access to core urban public services can help achieve a more economically productive and environmentally sustainable city.
This work on sanitation is part of a series on sustainable cities, produced by the World Resources Institute (WRI). The series is called the World Resources Report (WRR), Towards a More Equal City.
The report has a set of research papers that examines this question from the perspective of a core urban service, such as this paper on access to equitable access to sanitation services. This paper first examines urban sanitation from global comparative perspective and then provides a more detailed look at 15 cities. The sanitation analysis examines efforts to address fecal sludge containment, transportation, and treatment.
The research considers current realities in informal settlements and the challenges of providing universal, reliable, and affordable sanitation services. It will examine efforts to reduce costs to consumers, efforts to upgrading informal settlements, and the importance of short-, medium- and long-term solutions, while considering governance, finance, and the capacity to plan and manage urban change over time.
In July 2017, we held a high-level stakeholder engagement workshop in Washington D.C. More than 15 international sanitation experts joined us for an intensive two-day workshop on the framing and solution sets of the working papers.
From April 2017 – September 2018, we are working with local sanitation experts and researchers to collect primary data on the level of access, quality of access, and costs of sanitation services in 15 cities across the global South. The list of cities includes: Cochabamba, Bolivia; Nairobi, Kenya; Lagos, Nigeria; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Kampala, Uganda; Mzuzu, Malawi; Cali, Colombia; Bangalore, India; Dhaka, Bangladesh; Caracas, Venezuela; Sao Paulo, Brazil; Mumbai, India; Maputo, Mozambique; Karachi, Pakistan; Colombo, Sri Lanka; and Kunming, China.
World Resources Report, Towards a More Equal City website
BMGF grant database (brief information)
Jillian Du
jillian.du@wri.org
Victoria Beard
vbeard@wri.org
Capacity developmentCitiesPolitical processes and institutional aspectsGlobalEnabling environment and institutional strengtheningBill & Melinda Gates FoundationPoliticians and local decision makersUniversity, education or research institution
United States
Project location