Can pay, will pay — securing a slum water supply for squatters
Habitat II reaffirmed that water is a human right. But how do people without economic or political muscle secure this right against a background of institutional, legal and financial obstacles? This is the story of one NGO's attempt to act as intermediary between the dispossessed andthe authorities — could it disprove the myth that the poor can't pay and won't pay?
the authorities — could it disprove the myth that the poor can't pay and won't pay?
Communities as the agents of commodification: The Kumbo Water Authority in Northwest Cameroon
Page, Ben
Geoforum, Vol. 34 (2003), Iss. 4 P.483
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0016-7185(03)00049-6 [Citations: 35]Water safety plans for piped urban supplies in developing countries: a case study from Kampala, Uganda
Howard, Guy
Godfrey, Sam
Tibatemwa, Sarah
Niwagaba, Charles
Urban Water Journal, Vol. 2 (2005), Iss. 3 P.161
https://doi.org/10.1080/15730620500236567 [Citations: 19]On whose terms: utilities, enterprises or communities? The territorial political economy of water and sanitation sector reforms in Dhaka
Heidler, Andri
Luies, Sharmin Khan
Kamal, Abul
Ul-Alam, Mahbub
Lüthi, Christoph
Crevoisier, Olivier
Environment and Urbanization, Vol. 35 (2023), Iss. 1 P.156
https://doi.org/10.1177/09562478221149915 [Citations: 4]- A call to action: organizational, professional, and personal change for gender transformative WASH programming
- Providing municipal faecal sludge management services: lessons from Bangladesh
- Menstrual hygiene management: education and empowerment for girls?
- Webwatch
- Transgender-inclusive sanitation: insights from South Asia