Community-driven development for water and sanitation in urban areas

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Author(s)
Satterthwaite, D. with McGranahan, G. and Mitlin, D.
Publication language
English
Pages
34pp
Date published
01 Apr 2005
Publisher
Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Capacity development, Urban, Water, sanitation and hygiene
Organisations
Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council

Community organizations working with local NGOs have been responsible
for many of the most cost-effective initiatives to improve and extend provision for
water and sanitation to low-income urban households. Some have achieved considerable
scale, especially where water and sanitation utilities and local governments work
with them. Many of the initiatives that improved and extended provision for water and
sanitation were not ‘water and sanitation’ projects but initiatives through which urban
poor households developed better quality and more secure housing – for instance
through squatter upgrading and tenure regularization or serviced site schemes. These
were often supported by loan finance that helped households or community organizations
to fund improved provision for water and sanitation or to fund the development
of new homes with improved provision. Some of these initiatives led to more effective
and much less costly ways to develop the trunk infrastructure into which most community-
driven water and sanitation initiatives need to integrate in urban areas.
These initiatives have considerable relevance for meeting the water and sanitation
target within the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). First, they show how it
is possible to reach even the poorest households in urban areas with much improved
provision. This has particular importance since, within an urbanizing world, a large
and increasing proportion of those with low incomes who lack provision live in urban
areas. Secondly, they generally have much lower unit-costs per person reached than
conventional government or private utility managed initiatives, and greater possibilities
of cost recovery. Thus, external support for these on a larger scale does not
require levels of external funding that are unrealistic. But they do imply major changes
in how local governments and international agencies work with urban poor groups.
At the core of most initiatives described in this booklet is the possibility for urban poor
groups and their organizations to influence what is done and to be involved in doing
it. And to be involved in monitoring progress, which implies a very different kind of
monitoring from that envisaged for the MDGs. If the MDGs are to be met, more equal
relationships are needed between urban poor groups and local governments and water
and sanitation providers. This means a shift from conventional patronage-based relationships
to relationships that are more transparent, accountable to urban poor groups
and within the law. This is the change that has to permeate all levels – from the lowest
political unit (the ward, commune, neighbourhood, parish) through city, provincial
and national governments. International agencies will have to increase their support
to community-driven initiatives but in ways that are accountable to urban poor
groups and that catalyse and support these groups’ own resources and capacities. And,
as importantly, support these groups’ efforts to develop effective partnerships with
local governments.