Strengthening country-led water and sanitation services monitoring and data use for decision-making: lessons from WaterAid experience in four countries

Author:

Kimbugwe Ceaser1,Davis Tim2,Goff Fraser2,Greggio Ellen3ORCID,Chanthet Sokhadeva4,Kiap Benjamin5

Affiliation:

1. a WaterAid Uganda, Uganda

2. b WaterAid Australia, Australia

3. c WaterAid UK, UK

4. d Ministry of Rural Development, Cambodia

5. e Department of National Planning and Monitoring, Government of Papua New Guinea, Papua New Guinea

Abstract

Abstract Water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) are fundamental human rights, of critical importance to health, education, wellbeing, and economic prosperity. To fulfil these human rights and drive progress towards universal and sustainable access to WASH services, government service-level monitoring processes and data use are vital for effective decision-making and accountability. Despite increasing sector efforts to improve WASH data access, there is limited evidence of this translating into effective data use to inform effective planning for equitable access and budgeting and of the factors affecting this. Four case studies where WaterAid has worked with national government and sector stakeholders to strengthen WASH monitoring processes in Uganda, Cambodia, Papua New Guinea (PNG), and Myanmar were analysed through an analytical framework to understand the impact of different factors and related system-strengthening activities towards outcomes of increased data coordination, timely and relevant data availability and data use to inform decision-making in WASH service delivery. The analysis highlighted that strengthening activities aiming at improving indicators, data collection and analysis, and the type of data collection and visualisation technology have a direct impact on improving WASH sector coordination and timely data availability. However, to ensure strengthening activities support data use for decision-making, they need to be developed from within and adapt to the on-going wider political economy systems evolution, including formal processes such as decentralisation and evolving informal political drivers.

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Environmental Science (miscellaneous),Water Science and Technology

Reference22 articles.

1. Monitoring drinking water, sanitation and hygiene in non-household settings: priorities for policy and practice;International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health,2015

2. Monitoring for learning and developing capacities in the WASH sector;Water Policy,2013

3. Department of National Planning and Monitoring 2015 PNG National Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WaSH) Policy 2015–2030. Government of the Independent State of Papua New Guinea. DNPM.

4. Department of National Planning and Monitoring 2018 Medium Term Development Plan III 2018–2022. Development Planning Framework and Strategic Priorities. Government of the Independent State of Papua New Guinea. DNPM.

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