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
Shukla Shauchalay is located in a bustling market in Samastipur in Bihar, India. The entrepreneur first got involved in the sanitation business a decade ago as a sub-contractor manufacturing cement pit rings for a local NGO’s sanitation program.
Despite the demonstrated health, economic, social, and environmental benefits that sanitation improvements provide, governments consistently underfund and place a low priority on sanitation.
In this webinar, Holly Dentz, Leslie Greene Hodel, and Kari Nelson present key findings from a series of six independent ex-post evaluations, available on Glob
While global progress toward achieving Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to meet water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) needs is notable, the number of people lacking these essential services remains vast, and progress in the world's poorest cou
Through its commitment to identifying sustainable approaches to WASH, USAID commissioned a series of six ex-post evaluations of its WASH activities completed three to 10 years prior.
For the fifth year in a row, the Government of India (GOI) celebrated the top ranked cities of India’s annual cleanliness survey, known locally as Swachh Survekshan, in a virtual ceremony presided over by Minister Hardeep Singh Puri and Secretary
Since it emerged in late 2019, COVID-19 has gained a foothold in more than 185 countries, claimed more than 645,000 lives, sickened more than 16 million people, and become the world’s worst public health cris
This case study examines the experience of sanitation enterprises that were supported by Population Services International's (PSI) 'Supporting Sustainable Sanitation Improvements' (3Si) intervention in Bihar, India.