Loading
  • 0Shopping Cart
African Water Association Knowledge Mgmt
  • Home
  • About
    • Introduction
    • Our partners
  • Our Projects
  • Publications
  • Média
    • Videos
    • Maps
  • Bookcase
  • Contact-us
  • en
    • fr
  • Menu Menu

Recent Posts

  • The Abidjan Declaration, a Key Outcome of the 21st AfWASA Congress/FSM7 Conference
  • The Yaounde Statement: AfWA Makes Recommendations for Non-Revenue Water (NRW) Management
  • Share Water No. 13
  • Zoom : des équipements pour l’approvisionnement en eau et le traitement des eaux usées
  • A Non-Intrusive Technology for Network Performance Control

Categories

  • Autonomous – sanitation (3)
  • collective-sanitation (4)
  • news (31)
  • policy-and-regulation-of-the-sanitation-sector (7)
  • sanitation (15)
  • sludge-management (3)
  • Unbilled water (2)
  • urban and peri urban sanitation (1)
  • water (14)
  • access to potable water (4)
  • blog (18)
  • Eaux usées (3)
  • events (3)
  • front page blog (21)
  • OGSWC (1)
  • Projects / Programs Products (1)
  • Publications and Digital Collection (5)
  • SSD (2)
  • Technologies de gestion de l'eau (4)
  • tenders (2)
  • Uncategorized (13)
  • WA-WASH (1)
  • water policy and regulations (1)
  • Water projects (5)
  • Water Quality (2)
  • Water resources management (3)
  • zare's (2)

A comparative study of faecal sludge management in Malawi and Zambia: Status, challenges and opportunities in pit latrine emptying

Download A comparative study of faecal sludge management in Malawi and Zambia: Status, challenges and opportunities in pit latrine emptying

This review paper covers the issues of pit latrine emptying national policies and regulations with a
focus on Malawi and Zambia. With 2.4 billion people worldwide still lacking improved sanitation
facilities, developing countries need to look at policy, regulation and practice for household sanitation service provision with a new lens. What happens “next,” when improved sanitation facilities eventually become full? An emphasis on faecal sludge management has multiplied this important issue in the past few years. The authors compare the pit latrine emptying situation in Malawi and Zambia with a focus on status, challenges and opportunities. To build this comparison, a desk review of national policies, local regulations and peer-reviewed journal papers was conducted. The paper concludes that existing national policies and regulations taking faecal sludge management into account are weak and have wide gaps in the two study countries. For the future, it is recommended, first, that household pit latrine emptying should be seen as an opportunity to address national sanitation gaps and, second, national policies and regulations need to be evaluated and updated.

Categories: ,
  • Description

Description

Download A comparative study of faecal sludge management in Malawi and Zambia: Status, challenges and opportunities in pit latrine emptying

Related products

  • Methods to reliably estimate faecal sludge quantities and qualities for the design of treatment technologies and management solutions

    Read more Show Details
  • Financer l’accès à l’eau et à l’assainissement en Méditerranée – Les financements innovants : solution ou illusion ?

    Read more Show Details
  • The impact of sanitation on infectious A disease and nutritional status: systematic review and meta-analysis

    Read more Show Details
  • Laying the Groundwork to Scale Up Sanitation Marketing in Ethiopia

    Read more Show Details

PARTNER

Contact-us

Abidjan – Ivory Coast Cocody Riviera Palmeraie

Tél. : (+225) 27 22 49 96 11 / 27 22 49 96 13 – Email : contact@afwa-hq.org

Category

usefull links

  • Our Partners
  • Our Projects
  • WA-WASH Program
  • AFRICAP
  • en
    • fr

RECHERCHE

Understanding Small Scale Providers of Sanitation Services: A Case Study of... Scheduled emptying services as an entry point for change
Scroll to top