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.
No fewer than 425 communities have been declared Open Defecation Free (ODF) in the country, the Chairman, sub-technical Committee on Water Supply and Quality Control, Mr Usang Bassey, said, yesterday, in Jos, the Plateau state capital.
A useful set of tools devised by EWB Volunteers Ashley Raeside and Jolly Ann Maulit in consultation with Malawi district CLTS leaders and practitioners.
This is a brief account of how Terry Wolfer and Robin (Buz) Kloot of the University of South Carolina stumbled upon CLTS as a solution to problems they encountered whilst working on issues of access to safe drinking water in Uganda. Without training, by just using the CLTS Handbook as their guide, they were able to train local Shepherd’s Heart International Ministries (SHIM) staff and trigger communities in the Buvuma Islands on Lake Victoria.
Between the 14th – 18th July 2008, Plan Zambia and Plan Regional East and Southern Africa (RESA) co-organized a hands-on CLTS training workshop at Fringilla Lodge, Chisamba, Zambia, which was facilitated by Dr Kamal Kar.