Using Tenure to Build a "Sanitation Cityscape": Narrowing Decisions for Targeted Sanitation Interventions

Using Tenure to Build a "Sanitation Cityscape": Narrowing Decisions for Targeted Sanitation Interventions

Author: 
Scott, Pippa
Publisher: 
SAGE Publications
Date published: 
2015
Record type: 
Responsibility: 
Cotton, Andrew, jt. author
Sohail, M, jt. author
Journal Title: 
Environment and Urbanization
Source: 
Environment and Urbanization, Vol. 27, No. 2, October 2015, pp. 389-406
Abstract: 

Sanitation interventions routinely overlook the implications of secure tenure for investment on the part of households. Drawing upon primary field research in Dakar, this paper presents a citywide sanitation planning framework that combines existing sanitation planning approaches with householders' investment logic as a function of their tenure security and status. The resulting framework, the Sanitation Cityscape, maps what is happening to faecal material on a citywide scale and why, thus providing a snapshot of the sanitation status of the city and a rationale for targeted interventions along the sanitation service chain. The paper offers an approach for policymakers and practitioners to narrow the decision-making process for citywide sanitation service provision. It aims to target urban sanitation interventions that are appropriate to the urban tenure mix, including non-networked systems, and a greater emphasis on widening the scope of sanitation service provision to include tenure-neutral operational activities, such as faecal sludge management.

Language: 
Country focus: 

CITATION: Scott, Pippa. Using Tenure to Build a "Sanitation Cityscape": Narrowing Decisions for Targeted Sanitation Interventions . : SAGE Publications , 2015. Environment and Urbanization, Vol. 27, No. 2, October 2015, pp. 389-406 - Available at: http://library.au.int/using-tenure-build-sanitation-cityscape-narrowing-decisions-targeted-sanitation-interventions