Crossfire: Can ‘admitting failure’ help the WASH sector learn and improve its work?
Two researchers in the water and sanitation field, Stephen Jones and Nicola Greene, explore whether the recent interest in admitting to failure in WASH projects is a refreshing way to open up debate and improve practice, or a way to garner good publicity without really achieving systematic change.Rosemarin, A., McConville, J., Flores, A., and Qiang, Z. (2012) The Challenges of Urban Ecological Sanitation: Lessons from the Erdos Eco-Town Project, Stockholm: Stockholm Environment Institute, and Rugby, UK: Practical Action Publishing.
Smillie, I. (1991) Mastering the Machine, Rugby, UK: Practical Action Publishing.
Rosemarin, A., McConville, J., Flores, A., and Qiang, Z. (2012) The Challenges of Urban Ecological Sanitation: Lessons from the Erdos Eco-Town Project, Stockholm: Stockholm Environment Institute, and Rugby, UK: Practical Action Publishing.
Smillie, I. (1991) Mastering the Machine, Rugby, UK: Practical Action Publishing.
Rosemarin, A., McConville, J., Flores, A., and Qiang, Z. (2012) The Challenges of Urban Ecological Sanitation: Lessons from the Erdos Eco-Town Project, Stockholm: Stockholm Environment Institute, and Rugby, UK: Practical Action Publishing.
Smillie, I. (1991) Mastering the Machine, Rugby, UK: Practical Action Publishing.
Rosemarin, A., McConville, J., Flores, A., and Qiang, Z. (2012) The Challenges of Urban Ecological Sanitation: Lessons from the Erdos Eco-Town Project, Stockholm: Stockholm Environment Institute, and Rugby, UK: Practical Action Publishing.
Smillie, I. (1991) Mastering the Machine, Rugby, UK: Practical Action Publishing.
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