Research on the Sustainability of Rural Sanitation Marketing in Vietnam

In the 1990s, the Socialist Republic of Vietnam formulated a new policy, strategy, and program to meet the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and national targets to improve rural water supply and sanitation. While progress in water supply increased rapidly, progress in sanitation lagged behind. By 1998, just 24 percent of rural Vietnamese households had sanitary toilets, placing the achievement of MDG targets for sanitation by 2015 at risk. The study provides valuable insights to practitioners working on projects related to sanitation marketing.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Brief biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC 2010-07
Subjects:ACCESS TO SANITATION, ACCESS TO WATER, BASIC SANITATION, BEHAVIOR CHANGE, COMMUNITY HEALTH, DEFECATION AREAS, DEMAND FOR SANITATION, ENVIRONMENTAL SANITATION, HYGIENE, PROMOTIONAL MATERIALS, RURAL SANITATION, RURAL WATER SUPPLY, SANITATION, SANITATION ACCESS, SANITATION COVERAGE, SANITATION MARKET, SANITATION MONITORING, SANITATION PROGRAM, SANITATION PROJECTS, SANITATION SERVICES, SANITATION STATISTICS, SEPTIC TANKS, SLUDGE, SLUDGE REMOVAL, SOCIAL MARKETING, TARGETS FOR SANITATION, TOILET, TOILETS, TOTAL SANITATION, WASTE, WASTE MANAGEMENT,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2010/07/12840640/vietnam-global-scaling-up-rural-sanitation-project-research-sustainability-rural-sanitation-marketing
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11693
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