Poor-Inclusive Urban Sanitation : An Overview

Most of the world's population now lives in urban areas, and in developing regions the proportion living in cities and towns has risen from 35 percent in 1990 to 45 percent in 2010, from 1.4 billion to 2.5 billion people (Jacobsen et al. 2012). A 2008 World Bank analysis estimated that a third of people living on less than US$2 per day reside in urban areas, and United Nation or UN-habitat estimates that just under 40 percent of urban dwellers live in slums, a number that is growing by more than 20 million per year (Baker 2008). These disparities highlight a pressing need to address the urban sanitation challenge comprehensively, with emphasis on including slum dwellers and poor communities that have typically been neglected. Without concerted intervention, the prospects of cholera, diarrhea, and worm infections will increase, jeopardizing education, productivity, and the quality of life for all urban dwellers. Although this overview of urban sanitation has shown that the current situation is far from ideal, and that widespread improvements will not occur at the present rate of progress, it also identifies initiatives that have potential for wider replication. There is no 'silver bullet' that will deliver improved sanitation to the developing world's burgeoning cities, and some key technical issues remain to be resolved, but much can be achieved by applying what is already known and proven in practice.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hawkins, Peter, Blackett, Isabel, Heymans, Chris
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2013-08
Subjects:ACCESS TO SANITATION, ACCESS TO WATER, BASIC SANITATION, CITY WATER, COMMERCIALIZATION, COMMUNAL TOILETS, COMMUNITY TOILET, COMMUNITY TOILETS, CONNECTION, CONNECTIONS, CONVENTIONAL SEWERAGE, DESLUDGING, DOMESTIC WATER, DRAINAGE CHANNELS, DRAINAGE SYSTEMS, DRAINS, DRINKING WATER, EFFECTIVE SANITATION, EFFLUENTS, ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS, EXCRETA DISPOSAL, FAECAL SLUDGE, FINANCIAL VIABILITY, FLUSH LATRINES, GROUNDWATER, HOUSEHOLDS, HYGIENE, IMPROVING SERVICE DELIVERY, IMPROVING WATER SUPPLY, INADEQUATE SANITATION, INADEQUATE WATER, INFORMAL SETTLEMENTS, INVESTMENT REQUIREMENTS, LAKES, LAND TENURE, LATRINE, LATRINE CONSTRUCTION, LATRINE PIT, LATRINE PITS, LATRINES, LOCAL AUTHORITIES, LOCAL SERVICES, LOCAL STAKEHOLDERS, LOW-INCOME COMMUNITIES, LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS, LOW-INCOME POPULATION, MAINTENANCE STANDARDS, MANAGEMENT OF EXCRETA, MUNICIPALITIES, NUMBER OF PEOPLE WITHOUT ACCESS, OPERATIONAL COSTS, PIPE SYSTEM, PIT LATRINES, POLLUTION, POOR DRAINAGE, POPULATION DENSITIES, POPULATION DENSITY, PUBLIC HEALTH, PUBLIC SERVICE PROVIDERS, PUBLIC SERVICE PROVISION, PUBLIC TOILETS, PUMPING STATIONS, PUMPS, REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT, RESIDENTIAL AREAS, RIVERS, SAFETY, SANITARY CONDITIONS, SANITATION, SANITATION ACCESS, SANITATION ACTIVITIES, SANITATION COVERAGE, SANITATION DATA, SANITATION DEVELOPMENT, SANITATION FACILITIES, SANITATION IMPROVEMENTS, SANITATION IN SLUMS, SANITATION INFRASTRUCTURE, SANITATION INVESTMENTS, SANITATION OPTIONS, SANITATION POLICY, SANITATION PROBLEMS, SANITATION PROGRAM, SANITATION PROGRAMS, SANITATION PROJECTS, SANITATION PROMOTION, SANITATION SECTOR, SANITATION SERVICE, SANITATION SERVICES, SANITATION SYSTEMS, SANITATION TECHNOLOGY, SEPTIC TANK, SEPTIC TANKS, SERVICE DELIVERY, SERVICE IMPROVEMENTS, SEWAGE, SEWAGE TREATMENT, SEWAGE TREATMENT PLANTS, SEWER PIPES, SEWERAGE, SEWERAGE NETWORKS, SEWERAGE SERVICES, SEWERAGE SYSTEM, SEWERAGE SYSTEMS, SEWERS, SITE SANITATION, SLUDGE TREATMENT, SLUM DWELLERS, SLUM UPGRADING, SMALL CITIES, SMALL TOWNS, SOLID WASTE, SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT, TOILET, TOILET BLOCKS, TOILET FACILITIES, TREATMENT PLANT, URBAN AREAS, URBAN COMMUNITIES, URBAN COMMUNITY, URBAN DWELLERS, URBAN ENVIRONMENT, URBAN ENVIRONMENTAL SANITATION, URBAN POPULATIONS, URBAN RESIDENTS, URBAN SANITATION, URBAN SANITATION IMPROVEMENTS, URBAN WATER, URBAN WATER SUPPLY, USERS, UTILITIES, VOLUMES OF WASTEWATER, WASTE WATER, WASTES, WASTEWATER COLLECTION, WASTEWATER TREATMENT, WASTEWATER TREATMENT PLANTS, WASTEWATER TREATMENT SYSTEMS, WATER ASSOCIATION, WATER CONSUMPTION, WATER RESOURCES, WATER SOURCES,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/08/18114328/targeting-urban-poor-improving-services-small-towns-poor-inclusive-urban-sanitation-overview-targeting-urban-poor-improving-services-small-towns-poor-inclusive-urban-sanitation-overview
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/17385
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