Resources: post-emergency

5 results
  • Tearfund is using CLTS in North Kivu, DRC. Sanitation and public health are challenging issues in the Democratic Republic of Congo. While peace was officially declared in 2002 in DRC, conflict between various armed groups and atrocities against civilians continues. Armed groups – located especially in North Kivu and South Kivu are known to violate and loot communities in the region. Communities in these regions continue to live in the midst of instability and uncertainty as they attempt to rebuild their lives after the war, and maintain healthy communities. Thus, the effects of the conflict can still be felt as few people have access to basic services, particularly water and sanitation, which poses serious health threats such as the spread of water-borne and sanitation related diseases.

  • The Lukenya Notes are a collection of experiences and key recommendations from the IDS meeting of CLTS practitioners held in Lukenya, Nairobi in July 2011, immediately after the AfricaSan3 meeting. The aim of the workshop was to focus on the key challenges we all face in taking CLTS to scale. Insights, case studies and options are clustered by themes which emerged from workshop brainstorming.

  • Background and description of the adaptation of CLTS to the post-emergency context in flood-affected areas in Pakistan by Syed Shah Nasir Khisro of IRSP, Mardan.

  • by Frank Greaves, Tearfund

    One pager on CLTS in the post emergency context

  • Powerpoint on an adaptation of CLTS to emergency settings in the aftermath of the earthquake in Haiti.The pilot was conducted by Oxfam America, Oxfam Spain, Oxfam Quebec and ACF (Action contre la Faim/Action against Hunger) France.