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Shaping policy for development

An overview of Lagoro IDP camp in Kitgum District, northern Uganda, 20 May 2007. Manoocher Deghati/IRIN

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  1. Mary Muntari collects water from a stream in Kachia, in Kaduna State Nigeria
    Mary Muntari collects water from a stream in Kachia, in Kaduna State Nigeria

    License: ODI given rights
    Credit: Kate Holt/IRIN
    Source: IRIN

    Assessing and responding to risk in sanitation planning

    Event - Public event - 19 April 2013

    At this biannual meeting of the UK Sanitation Community of Practice, Julian Doczi, Research Officer in ODI's Water Policy Programme, gave a presentation on the assessment and response to climate change risk in sanitation planning with the use of 'tools'. He assessed the global extent of these tools and their relevance for this challenge.

  2. Mary Muntari collects water from a stream in Kachia, in Kaduna State Nigeria
    Mary Muntari collects water from a stream in Kachia, in Kaduna State Nigeria

    License: ODI given rights
    Credit: Kate Holt/IRIN
    Source: IRIN

    Adaptation to climate change in water, sanitation and hygiene

    Projects - April 2013 to August 2013
    This project will analyse the risks to delivery of DFID Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) results posed by climate change and provide an economic analysis setting out the costs and benefits of adaptation options.
  3. Paying for progress: how will emerging post-2015 goals be financed in the new aid landscape?

    Publication - Discussion papers - 31 March 2013
    This paper explores options for financing some of the potential post-2015 goals within the changing development cooperation landscape. It focusses on five sectors: education, health, water and sanitation, sustainable energy and food and agriculture. It asks whether – and how much – additional finance is needed to meet the likely goals; and looks at what this implies for the design of the post-2015 framework.
  4. Julian Doczi

    What role for sanitation in water cooperation?

    Opinion - Articles and blogs - 22 March 2013

    Today is World Water Day, in the International Year of Water Cooperation, so it seems appropriate to talk about water, right? Yet these terms, and many of the discussions you will read today, continue to omit one of the biggest factors for actually achieving clean and secure water for all: sanitation.

  5. Tearfund WASH service delivery in South Sudan: contributions to peace-building and state-building

    Publication - Research reports and studies - 21 March 2013
    Mickelle Kooy and Leni Wild
    This report forms part of a one-year DFID-funded research project, implemented by Tearfund and ODI, that aims to explore the links between service delivery of water supply and sanitation and the wider processes of state-building and peace-building in fragile and conflict-affected states. It has focused on Tearfund’s water supply, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) interventions implemented through the ‘Capacity Building to Improve Humanitarian Action in the Water Sanitation and Hygiene’ programme, funded by DFID CHASE. The objective of the programme was to increase the capacity of Tearfund disaster management team operations, local partner projects and local government departments in conflict-affected and humanitarian contexts, to support improved access to potable water, sanitation and public health education (PHE), resulting in sustainable improved health, well-being and dignity for grassroots communities.
  6. Rhetoric versus realities: a diagnosis of rainwater management development processes in the Blue Nile Basin of Ethiopia

    Publication - Research reports and studies - 20 March 2013
    E. Ludi, A. Belay, A. Duncan, K. Snyder, J. Tucker, B. Cullen, M. Belissa, T. Oljira, A. Teferi, Z. Nigussie, A. Deresse, M. Debela, Y. Chanie, D. Lule, D. Samuel, Z. Lema, A. Berhanu, D. J. Merrey
    Ethiopia has invested extensively in rainwater management interventions, in particular soil and water conservation and afforestation, over the last 40 years, but often with disappointing impact. Given this limited success in natural resource conservation, a new approach is clearly needed, but what should it be? This report sets out some proposals.

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