Resources

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  • This In Focus Policy Briefing asks how we can maximise the great potential for transforming rural sanitation that CLTS offers.

  • Kamal Kar with Robert Chambers (2008). IDS and Plan UK.

    This handbook contains comprehensive information on CLTS, its pre-triggering, triggering and post-triggering stages, as well as examples and case studies from around the world.

  • Kamal Kar (2005). IDS

    This basic ‘how-to’ guide aims to help frontline staff and field facilitators to understand the philosophy and principles of CLTS, and to use some of the practical tools and techniques flexibly and freely.

  • Forty villages in two districts of TTS (West Timor) and TTU (North Central Timor) in East Nusa Tenggara were recently declared not only ODF but also having met the other criteria of Indonesia’s Community Based Total Sanitation (STBM in Indonesian language) approach.

  • Ky Ry village (48 households, 274 inhabitants) in A Xing commune in Vietnam has proved to be a leading village in CLTS, building and using latrines and cleaning up the village after Plan triggered CLTS there . Ky Ry village, home to Pako people, an ethnic minority people in Vietnam, is now ODF.
    Read the case study

  • Liberia’s president Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf is trying to fix her country one toilet at a time. Rose George reports from Fishtown on a female president with a difference, CLTS and why sanitation is still not being seen as a priority by many politicians and communities.

  • On the 20th January, four villages in Mulanje were declared ODF by Plan International and the government of Malawi. “[I]mproving sanitation condition of Malawi ensures the country’s own bright future,” said Bolaji Akinboro, Plan’s Country Director.

  • Chibuzor for Human Resource Development Organisation (CHIDO) together with UNICEF, Kenema District Council and other partners celebrates the ODF certification on 32 communities in Tunkia Chiefdom and has plans to make the whole district ODF.

  • Few Indian women can afford sanitary towels. But one social entrepreneur aims to change that, and provide an income too: Arunachalam Muruganantham went to great lengths to develop an effective solution, even wearing sanitary towels and a device filled with blood himself to test his innovations.

  • Desde la introducción del SANTOLIC a Bolivia en 2006, se han tenido experiencias en diferentes regiones en Bolivia y de diferentes organizaciones o instituciones, cuyos resultados están relacionados a las potencialidades y limitaciones del método. Por otra parte, se ha intentado “bolivianizar” el método, sin embargo no se ha podido sistematizar esta evolución en cada una de las regiones y considerando la pertinencia social, cultural y técnica.

    El objetivo de este taller de reflexión fue el intercambio de experiencias de implementación del método en las distintas regiones con el fin de analizar las posibilidades de ampliación, como parte de la política pública para reducir las brechas en la cobertura de saneamiento en las zonas rurales de Bolivia.

  • En el segundo semestre de 2009, con el Ministerio de Medio Ambiente y Agua se acordó implementar un proyecto piloto para sistematizar y evaluar las condiciones de aplicación del SANTOLIC en Bolivia. Con la anuencia del MMAyA se inició la ejecución del Plan de Acción Piloto en febrero de 2010.

  • Plan Pakistan with the help of a local partner, Integrated Regional Support Programme (IRSP), and supported by UNICEF is working to change the state of sanitation in Pakistan. CLTS is used to trigger communities but in order to sustain demand, Plan’s local partners remain in contact the communities through community resource persons. Three resource persons conduct follow on hygiene sessions. Additionally, the electronic and print media are utilized in order to ensure communities do not slip back to open defecation and keep on climbing up on sanitation ladder.

  • Case study from Mardan, NWFP, of a 22 year old woman from a very conservative Pathan background, who initially worked as a volunteer hygiene promoter for Integrated Rural Support Programme (IRSP), trained in CLTS, PRA and other approaches and then felt empowered to mobilise awareness around sanitation and hygiene in her communities.

  • COMING SOON
    A VENIR

  • Inspiring case study of Mohamed Yahya, who has not let physical limitations get in the way of his enthusiasm, commitment and dedication to become a fulltime CLTS facilitator and contribute to the wellbeing of the communities in the Adrar region of Mauritania.
    Read about the CLTS facilitator like no other

  • Case study on how various field level stakeholders interact to promote CLTS in their villages, based on the experience in Chikwina Health Centre in Nkhata Bay District
    The study looked at Traditional Leaders, Health Surveillance Assistants (HSAs, extension staff for health) and Natural Leaders as stakeholders in the CLTS process.

  • Case study from Chitipa District Council on the effectiveness of Natural Leaders and how they can best be utilised for CLTS success. This study presents suggestions for potential changes which can be made regarding support to Natural Leaders so that they can work at scale in Malawi.
    By Karina Redick, Junior Fellow 2011, Malawi Water and Sanitation Team, EWB Canada

  • Case study on the effects of integrating CLTS into routine Health Surveillance Assistant (HSA) work (the extension staff for the health department) in Salima district, based on action research carried out at the Maganga Rural Health Centre.

  • The recently launched strategy for creating an ODF Malawi by 2015 is giving a boost to CLTS activities in communities where open defecation used to be the order of the day.

  • Description of a CLTS training workshop that was jointly organised by Plan Sudan and Goal Ireland in cooperation with the Federal Ministry of Health and the Khartoum State Ministry of Health and took place from the 17th to 21st December 2011.

  • Thanks to CLTS the sanitation landscape and people’s lives, are changing in Homa Bay.

  • Over 40 countries are implementing CLTS. 15 have adopted it as their official approach for rural sanitation. More and more countries, regions within countries, and districts, are mounting campaigns for total sanitation through CLTS. Drawing on experiences with campaigns in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, India, Indonesia, Kenya, Malawi, Sierra Leone and other countries, this note by Robert Chambers lists approaches and actions which have contributed to success and other practical ideas. The core of CLTS is triggering, post-triggering follow-up, verification, and post ODF sustainability and progress. Campaigns include all these together with much more. It is mainly the ‘much more’ that is summarised here. This checklist is a practical tool for those who plan and implement campaigns

  • On the 7th December 2011, the Government of Malawi (GoM) through the Ministry of Agriculture, Irrigation and Water Development, Ministry of Health, Ministry of Education and key line ministries in collaboration with development partners, NGOs, private sector, communities and key sector players, officially launched the ODF Malawi Strategy (2012-2015).

    Read more about the strategy

    Read a Press Release in The Nation 6th December 2011

  • The Cooperative Housing Foundation (CHF-International), supported by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), just held an eight-day workshop on CLTS in Gbarnga, Bong County, Liberia with over thirty participants in attendance. The workshop was intended to train County Level Facilitators (CLF) and Natural Leaders (NL) under its CLTS Project.
    Speaking at the end of the workshop, the participants vowed to be true ambassadors of CHF-International and its partners under the Community Led Total Sanitation Initiative (CLTS) by sensitizing residents of Bong County, how to control open defecation.

  • Last year, a group of researchers at the University of New Mexico proposed that the control of infectious diseases is crucial to a country’s development in a way that had not been appreciated before. Places that harbour a lot of parasites and pathogens not only suffer the debilitating effects of disease on their workforces, but also have their human capital eroded, child by child, from birth. They noted that the brains of newly born children require 87% of those children’s metabolic energy. In five-year-olds the figure is still 44% and even in adults the brain—a mere 2% of the body’s weight—consumes about a quarter of the body’s energy. Any competition for this energy is likely to damage the brain’s development, and parasites and pathogens compete for it in several ways. Some feed on the host’s tissue directly, or hijack its molecular machinery to reproduce. Some, particularly those that live in the gut, stop their host absorbing food. And all provoke the host’s immune system into activity, which diverts resources from other things…[] There is, moreover, direct evidence that infections and parasites affect cognition. Intestinal worms have been shown to do so on many occasions. Malaria, too, is bad for the brain. A study of children in Kenya who survived the cerebral version of the disease suggests that an eighth of them suffer long-term cognitive damage. In the view of Mr Eppig and his colleagues, however, it is the various bugs that cause diarrhoea which are the biggest threat. Diarrhoea strikes children hard. It accounts for a sixth of infant deaths, and even in those it does not kill it prevents the absorption of food at a time when the brain is growing and developing rapidly.