Editorial: Doing WASH well – a set of principles for implementing agencies and their evaluators
Many of the readers of this journal work in national and local governments and non-governmental organizations. With financial and in-kind support from communities, from national budget allocations, and from funds provided by external donor agencies, they aim to improve water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services at household and community level, and across entire local government administrative areas.Agenda for Change <https://www.washagendaforchange.net/>
Sanitation and Water for All <http://sanitationandwaterforall.org/>
Sphere <https://spherestandards.org/>
Agenda for Change <https://www.washagendaforchange.net/>
Sanitation and Water for All <http://sanitationandwaterforall.org/>
Sphere <https://spherestandards.org/>
Agenda for Change <https://www.washagendaforchange.net/>
Sanitation and Water for All <http://sanitationandwaterforall.org/>
Sphere <https://spherestandards.org/>
Agenda for Change <https://www.washagendaforchange.net/>
Sanitation and Water for All <http://sanitationandwaterforall.org/>
Sphere <https://spherestandards.org/>
- A call to action: organizational, professional, and personal change for gender transformative WASH programming
- Transgender-inclusive sanitation: insights from South Asia
- Providing municipal faecal sludge management services: lessons from Bangladesh
- Adolescent schoolgirls' experiences of menstrual cups and pads in rural western Kenya: a qualitative study
- Global assessment of grant-funded, market-based sanitation development projects