Activity Description
The USAID Upper Lempa Watershed Project will improve the health and resilience of the Upper Lempa watershed, directly impacting the well-being and water security of 180,000 people in nine munic
Activity Description
USAID's Maji na Usafi wa Mazingira (MUM) Activity aims to improve Tanzanian systems for planning, financing, and implementing actions to expand access to water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) a
USAID’s Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Finance (WASH-FIN) program in Zambia provided strategic support to select Commercial Water Utilities (CUs) and the Ministry of Water Development and Sanitat
Activity Description
USAID’s Anka Jiko Activity (loosely translated as “concerning water”) aims to improve the quality and sustainability of water and sanitation services in rural Mali by building the capacity of c
In partnership with two District Assemblies, Tatale and Kpandai, in the Northern region of Ghana, UNICEF Ghana and USAID’s Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Partnerships and Learning for Sustainability (WASHPaLS) project are
This brief describes an approach for deciding the eligibility of poor and vulnerable households for targeted subsidies to cover the costs of installing a durable toilet sub-structure (pit lining and slab) and ventilation pipe in rural Ghana.
In 2019, USAID’s Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Partnerships and Learning for Sustainability (WASHPaLS) project surveyed all households in 109 ODF-certified communities in the northern districts of Tatale and Kpandai in Ghana—5,615 households tota
This is the final report of the impact evaluation of the Cambodia Integrated Nutrition, Hygiene, and Sanitation NOURISH project commissioned by the Center for Water Security, Sanitation and Hygiene in the United States Agency for International Dev
Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Partnerships and Learning for Sustainability (WASHPaLS) is a five-year project funded through the Global Health Bureau to support USAID’s goal of reducing morbidity and mortality in children under five by strengthenin
Prior studies have identified several aspects of Community-led Total Sanitation (CLTS) program implementation as crucial to both achieve and sustain open defecation free (ODF) communities: (i) the involvement of community leaders, (ii) intensity a