Perka BNPB No 3 THN 2016 TTG SKPDB PDF
Perka BNPB No 3 THN 2016 TTG SKPDB PDF
Perka BNPB No 3 THN 2016 TTG SKPDB PDF
WATER, SANITATION
AND HYGIENE?
Design: Wingfinger
2
Why advocate for water,
sanitation and hygiene?
Contents
Introduction 4
What is advocacy? 4
The global problem 5
Water, sanitation and hygiene are fundamental 7
to human development
Governments are responsible 8
The role of civil society 9
The role of the church 10
Governments and civil society must work together 11
Next steps 12
Useful networks and organisations 13
Further reading and references 13
© TEARFUND 2009 3
W H Y A DVO C AT E F O R WAT E R , S A N I TAT I O N A N D H YG I E N E ?
Introduction
This booklet is for organisations that are engaged in water, sanitation and hygiene
(WASH) programme work but not yet carrying out advocacy on these matters. It
will help show how an advocacy approach can complement programmatic work in
addressing the issue of WASH.
In this short guide we look at what advocacy is, the global WASH problem,
how water and sanitation is fundamental to human development, the role of
governments, civil society and churches, and why advocacy is necessary.
The aim of this booklet is to inspire organisations to integrate advocacy into their
water, sanitation and hygiene work, in order to bring long-term sustainable and
positive change.
What is advocacy?
Advocacy is about influencing people, policies, structures and systems in order to
bring about change. It is about influencing those in power to act more fairly.
‘seeking with, and on behalf of, poor people to address the underlying causes of
poverty, bring justice and support good development through influencing the
policies and practices of the powerful’.
Advocacy is firmly rooted in the Bible, and is based on God’s commitment to justice:
Decision makers, such as governments and local leaders, are often aware that there
is a problem and will welcome suggestions about how it can be solved. The role
of an advocate includes facilitating communication between people, negotiating,
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In the year 2000, all UN member states signed up to the Millennium Development
Goals (MDGs) to halve world poverty by 2015. Goal 7, target 10, aims to ‘halve, by
2015, the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water
and basic sanitation’.
Progress against this MDG target, however, is poor. At current rates, in sub-Saharan
Africa the water target will not be met until 2035, while the sanitation target will
not be met until the 22nd century.
■ Globally, 2.5 billion people lack
access to basic sanitation and 900
million people lack access to safe
drinking water.2
At Tearfund, we are calling on world leaders to give much more political priority
to WASH, to spend more money on WASH, and to spend it more effectively,
particularly in the countries most off-track in terms of their progress towards
meeting the MDG target. We are also advocating for developing country
governments to listen to the needs and priorities of poor people (especially
women) 4 and strengthen the political will and financing necessary to meet the
MDG target. We are slowly making progress, but there is still a lot to be done.
1 For further information about effective advocacy work, see Tearfund’s ROOTS 1 and 2, Advocacy Toolkit.
3 Unicef and WHO (2008) state that 4,000 children die each day from diarrhoea; but poor sanitation is also
linked to many other causes of infant death, such as pneumonia, neonatal disorders and undernutrition,
trachoma and worm-related illnesses, bringing the conservative estimate to a total of 5,000.
4 Women are particularly affected by poor water and sanitation facilities, as they are often responsible for
managing their households, collecting water, cleaning, and looking after family members who are sick.
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W H Y A DVO C AT E F O R WAT E R , S A N I TAT I O N A N D H YG I E N E ?
This guide outlines why further advocacy work is needed by Tearfund partners in
their own countries. In particular, it looks at five issues:
■ The provision of adequate WASH services is fundamental to human
development.
■ Governments are responsible for providing adequate WASH services and should
be held accountable.
■ Civil society can help ensure the needs of poor people are met.
■ The church is a vital part of civil society and has a specific role to play.
■ Governments, civil society and the church must work together to bring about
lasting improvements in WASH.
Finally, we look briefly at how to begin advocacy work on WASH and provide
recommendations on further resources and contacts.
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Governments need to ensure that this right is realised by taking measures towards
enabling the whole population to access clean water, sanitation and safe hygiene
promotion. Governments will not be able to reduce poverty and make progress in
other areas such as health, education, gender equity and economic growth unless
WASH issues are addressed:
■ Over half the hospital beds in developing countries are filled with people
suffering from water-related diseases.5
■ Some 443 million school days are missed each year because
of sickness from diarrhoeal diseases. It is estimated that half
of the girls who stop attending primary school in Africa do
so because of the lack of toilets.6
6 Ibid
7 Ibid p58
8 Prüss-Üstün et al (2008) p7
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W H Y A DVO C AT E F O R WAT E R , S A N I TAT I O N A N D H YG I E N E ?
A review of 12 poverty reduction strategy papers found that despite water and
sanitation often being in the top three or four priorities in participatory poverty
assessments, the sector did not receive as much attention as health and education.
The study recognised the importance of developing effective advocacy tools to
‘build and sustain commitment to the sector within poverty reduction strategies’
and the important role of civil society in this process.
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Civil society can work with poor people to get their voices heard by those in power.
This can be done by speaking on behalf of communities, speaking with those
affected or empowering representatives to speak for themselves.
Civil society has a role in holding governments to account for the promises they
have made and their failure to ensure these services are provided. Similarly, civil
society should congratulate governments when appropriate, for example if they
respond to public pressure or honour their promises and commitments.
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The local church forms part of many communities around the world, and its leaders
and members see and experience poverty and injustice at first hand. Christian
organisations can help the local church make the most of being in this strategic
and timely position to enable communities to speak for themselves, or advocate on
behalf of, or with, those without adequate WASH facilities. Churches can:
— garner a deep understanding of local issues
— build relationships based on trust within the communities where they are found
— be permanently based in a community
— make use of their coordinating body to gain the credibility, respect and authority
needed to affect local, national, regional and international policy processes.
11 For further information on the role of the local church, see Tearfund’s ROOTS 11, Partnering with the Local Church.
10 © TEARFUND 2009
W H Y A DVO C AT E F O R WAT E R , S A N I TAT I O N A N D H YG I E N E ?
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W H Y A DVO C AT E F O R WAT E R , S A N I TAT I O N A N D H YG I E N E ?
Next steps
Before deciding whether to develop an advocacy strategy, you can find out
more about what advocacy involves by reading Tearfund’s Advocacy Toolkit
(ROOTS 1 and 2). This will give you further information on why advocacy is
important and practical ways to carry it out.
It is good to try to work in partnership. Find out which other organisations are
working on the same issues as you. Could you work together to influence decisions?
Are there any national coalitions doing WASH advocacy work that you could join?
If you decide to go ahead with advocacy work on WASH, the following questions
might help to analyse the issue:
— Who benefits from water, sanitation and hygiene promotion, who does not, and
what additional burdens are placed on those who do not benefit?
— Why do they not benefit? Is it because of prejudice at community level, or a
legal or governance issue? To find this out, you may need to do some research by
asking other organisations, research institutions or universities, or by requesting
information from a government department.
— How much do WASH services cost and how much do users pay? How much do
those who do not benefit pay for the service? Who should pay?
— Who has the government given responsibility to for delivering water services? Is
it local government, national government or other providers? You may need to
do some research on this and find out which government ministry or ministries
are responsible for water.
— Who has the government given responsibility to for sanitation? It may be spread
across a number of ministries. Is there a clear lead and are these ministries
coordinating?
— What is the government’s policy or strategy for delivering WASH?
— How are decisions made about WASH policy and practice, and who makes them?
— What monitoring systems are in place to make sure the government does what
it says?
— What area can you focus on that best uses your existing knowledge and
experience? How could advocacy be used as an approach that complements the
programmatic WASH work you are already doing? If there is a clear advocacy
angle, this might be the best place to start.
12 © TEARFUND 2009
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W H Y A DVO C AT E F O R WAT E R , S A N I TAT I O N A N D H YG I E N E ?
■ UNDP Human Development Report (2006) Beyond Scarcity: Power, poverty and
the global water crisis, UNDP, New York
■ Unicef and WHO Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation
(2008) Progress on drinking water and sanitation: Special focus on sanitation,
Unicef, New York, and WHO, Geneva
■ Water and Sanitation Programme (2003) Water supply and sanitation in poverty
reduction strategy papers in sub-Saharan Africa: Developing a benchmarking
review and exploring the way forward, World Bank, Nairobi
14 © TEARFUND 2009
www.tearfund.org
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