Welcome
Objective
The objective of this book is to help water supply and
sanitation professionals and others who care about advancing sanitation to
promote it effectively.
What is promotion? Promotion involves all the things one must do
to raise or advance a cause, raise the profile and status of the cause, further
the growth and expansion of the cause, and to further its popularity. Promotion,
in the public health sense of the word, also involves providing the enabling
mechanisms to others so that they may take up the cause armed with effective
tools. This book has been designed to try and meet this need with regard to the
promotion of sanitation.
This is not a press kit or an advocacy kit to be placed directly
on the desk of a minister or politician. It is a group of articles and tools to
guide the user in promoting sanitation to others and to help the user strengthen
his own programme or project so that it will be a showcase example of good
practice. It does not provide directly-usable advocacy materials, such as
overhead transparencies but does provide enough guidance for the user to make
his or her own.
Intended audience
This book has been prepared for policy makers and strategic
planners at national, district and municipal levels who are responsible for
securing investments for sanitation, and planning, commissioning, monitoring and
evaluating sanitation programmes.
Other potential users are external support agencies and
nongovernmental organizations that make large investments in sanitation or have
a role in providing expertise in sanitation to other large investors. A few
items can be used directly at project level by senior field staff to check
whether their projects are applying principles of good practice and thus should
be successful showcase examples.
Box 1. Intended Audience
- policy makers - strategic planners - external support
agencies - nongovernmental organizations - senior project-level field
staff |
Development
The idea for this book and its contents were developed by the
Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council Working Group on Promotion of
Sanitation, which worked between 1994 and 1997 through periodic meetings and
correspondence. During these meetings the Working Group decided that water
supply and sanitation professionals need to do at least three things to raise
the status and profile of the sector to attract more activity and investments in
countries.
· Gain the
commitment of politicians and other partners.
· Do showcase programmes and
projects as examples of what can be accomplished with the support of these
partners.
· Innovate, research and trial
new approaches in the field and share these innovations with others. This
exchange of ideas and information will greatly stimulate the
sector.
This book is designed to meet these three needs. Doing all three
will give the greatest boost to sanitation. The articles in the book should be
used to make these three things happen.
After a careful review of existing literature on topics
identified as important for such a book, it was decided that very little
literature existed on how to promote sanitation, and that articles should be
produced to assist water supply and sanitation professionals in promotion. Most
articles in the book, therefore, are new and unique and were written
specifically for promotion. They do not duplicate existing literature on
sanitation, however, some articles and checklists, such as on hygiene education
and gender, are summaries and overviews to achieve a quick understanding of a
complex topic, so that these concepts can be practically applied without pouring
through a great deal of literature. A list of references and further reading, is
provided for those who would like to read more in depth.
Scope
The book focuses exclusively on promotion and does not attempt
to give guidance on programming, how to run sanitation institutions or choosing
sanitation technologies. There are other recently produced guidance materials on
these areas and these are listed in the bibliography. Included is advice on best
practices in the form of principles and features of better sanitation programs,
a list of some commonly-held wrong assumptions upon which programmes are
sometimes based which can lead to failure, and checklists and worksheets based
upon what is thought to be state-of-the art in these areas. On the other hand,
it is recognized that this is an ever-changing field of work, and that there is
no one way or right answer for the wide variety of cultures that need to be
served for sanitation. Therefore, these guidance materials should not be viewed
as prescriptive but rather only as advisory based on current thinking.
Sanitation involves excreta disposal, water supply, hygiene
behaviours, drainage, solid waste, and health care waste. The book pays a great
deal of attention to excreta disposal, as it is the major problem in
environmental sanitation. However, most of the articles would apply to the
entire field of environmental sanitation. The principles and features of better
programmes, for example, could apply equally to excreta disposal, solid waste or
drainage. The articles on gender and hygiene behaviour change are certainly
generic in scope. This book, therefore, should not be viewed as a tool for the
promotion of excreta disposal only.
Box 2. What this book is and is not.
This book IS:
- A source of ideas on promotion - Guidance on best
practices - A sharing of innovative approaches - Tools to strengthen
skills in promotion
This book IS NOT:
- Prescriptive - A press kit - An advocacy kit - A
sanitation programming guideline - An overview of sanitation
technologies - A book exclusively on promotion of excreta disposal - A
review of existing sanitation literature - An endorsement of certain
sanitation technologies |
Overview and structure
The book is divided into four main parts.
· The challenge - A
sanitation revolution
· Gaining political
will and partnerships
· Promotion through
better programmes
· Promotion through
innovation
The Challenge - A sanitation revolution. This part
explains the scope of the challenge before us. It contains a statement of the
problem and a possible way forward, some commonly held wrong assumptions about
sanitation, and research needs.
Gaining political will & partnerships. This part
provides ideas on promotional techniques that may be applied to sanitation. The
section is divided into two sections, Principles and guidelines
and Case studies. The first section explains
the major concepts in advocacy, mobilizing the media and mobilizing partners.
The second part contains two case studies on how political will and partnerships
were achieved in Uganda and India.
Promotion through better programmes. This part is
intended to help you strengthen existing sanitation programmes for which you are
responsible. We cannot promote sanitation until we can do good programmes and
projects as showcase examples. We cannot win the support of politicians and
other partners to invest in sanitation until we can prove to them their
investments will be well spent and sustainable. This section is not a complete
guide to doing better programmes, but rather a focus on strengthening areas
known to be commonly weak. The section is not intended to be a programming
guideline nor to be comprehensive on every aspect of sanitation programmes.
Other literature already exists in these areas and there was no need to
duplicate it.
The part begins with Principles which should form
the foundation of all good programmes. The principles and other articles in this
section were derived from an analysis of good sanitation programmes. They are
statements of best practices. It then follows with a section on
Empowerment which highlights the importance of putting people at the
centre of sanitation programmes. Articles focus on gender, hygiene behaviour
change, participatory approaches and household financing. These articles reflect
the good practice of many of the principles. This part ends with a section on
Checklists, derived from principles and the empowerment articles,
to help you apply these in a practical way.
Promotion through innovation. This final section
illustrates some of the newest innovations that show promise for promotion of
sanitation. While there have been many achievements in sanitation over the last
thirty years, such as new low cost technologies, and guidelines on hygiene
education, communications and gender considerations, we need to continue to
search for new ways and to innovate. Research, field trials and the sharing of
results should be a never-ending process.
The section is divided into three sections: Child-centred
approaches, Participatory approaches, and Innovative
technologies.
A book on sanitation promotion would be incomplete if it did not
address the role of technologies in the advancement of sanitation. Some of the
barriers to achieving better coverage have to do with cost, lack of sufficient
water supply for flushing and transport, concern over water pollution, and an
inability to dig or construct in certain physical conditions. These barriers, as
well as a growing movement to recycle nutrients back into soil, has stimulated
research and trials into new and innovative sanitation technologies. Most of
these technologies have an ecological focus and are provided here in the hope of
stimulating even more research and innovation. Most of the case studies on
technologies also describe how they were promoted in the context in which they
were trialed and many valuable lessons on promotion are drawn.
The technologies described in this book are not necessarily
endorsed by the World Health Organization nor is their inclusion intended to
suggest that these are the only acceptable technologies for the future.
How to use this book
Sanitation Promotion is intended to be used as a
pick-and-choose book. You do not need to read the entire book, or
read from front to back to benefit from it. Use the table of contents to
determine what interests you and your programme. The articles, worksheets and
checklists may be photocopied and passed along to others. The contents may also
be used for training courses and sanitation promotion workshops. You may use the
book as a model to create you own local sanitation promotion book. To do so, you
may wish to translate articles into a local language, to scale down the language
to a simpler level, to format it with larger font and more illustrations and to
pick and choose articles relevant to your situation. For your local book, you
may wish to commission promotional articles such as an article on winning the
support of local politicians using country-specific statistics, articles on
innovative promotional techniques and showcase sanitation projects. The more you
localize your promotion book, the more people will notice it and relate to it.
Box 3. How to USE this book:
· Pick and choose articles that
suit your needs · Photocopy and share
articles · Discuss and debate issues raised
in the articles · Use articles for sanitation
training courses · Use articles for
sanitation promotion workshops · Try the
worksheets and checklists · As a model to
make your own local promotion book |
Pick and choose, photocopy, share, discuss and debate. These are
the main things you should do with the contents of this book. Then decide what
to do on your own to promote sanitation. This book is a first step, a source of
ideas for the promotion of sanitation. It is certainly not the last word on
sanitation promotion. However, it will be up to you whether the ideas in this
book are actually applied in your own country or local area.
May ling Simpson-Hrt |
Sara Wood |
Coordinator |
Communications Consultant |
Promotion of Sanitation Working Group |
Water, Sanitation and Health Unit |
Water, Sanitation and Health Unit |
World Health Organization |
World Health Organization |
Geneva, Switzerland |
Geneva, Switzerland |
|