
Aims
To support sanitation policy development in Ghana, Kenya and Bangladesh and in particular to provide a firm financial analysis basis that contributes to city sanitation investment decisions in the five selected cities and nationally, and that supports assessment of public finance requirements for pro-poor urban sanitation improvement. This study should generate useful international learning, including with reference to financing requirements for achieving the sanitation SDGs.
Locations: Kisumu, Nakuru and Malindi (Kenya), Rangpur (Bangladesh) and Kumasi (Ghana).
Read more
- Blog: Feb 2018 – Mind the gap: Investigating the funding shortfall in urban sanitation
- Blog: Jul 2019 – Is slum sanitation likely to require major subsidy?
- Research Brief: July 2019 – Sanitation policies, practices and preferences in Rangpur, Bangladesh
- Research Brief: July 2019 – Sanitation policies, practices and preferences in Kumasi, Ghana
- Research Brief: July 2019 – Sanitation policies, practices and preferences in Nakuru, Kenya
- Research Brief: July 2019 – Sanitation policies, practices and preferences in Malindi, Kenya
- Research Brief: July 2019 – Sanitation policies, practices and preferences in Kisumu, Kenya
- Research Brief: August 2020 -The Gap Between Supply and Demand for Safe FSM Services in Kisumu
- Journal Article (PLOS ONE): September 2020 – When pits fill up: Supply and demand for safe pit-emptying services in Kisumu, Kenya