To accelerate the adoption of Community-led Total Sanitation (CLTS) by enabling communities to take action to end open defecation and adopt hygienic behaviors, leading to improved dignity, health, and well-being of the impoverished.
Our intention is to support the scaling up of CLTS with quality and sustainability. To this end, we engage in the following activities:
action learning, networking and dissemination,
co-convening workshops for sharing and learning,
the CLTS website and bi-monthly newsletter
We proactively co-generate and co-create practical knowledge, find out about and share innovations, and seek to make all this widely and quickly accessible. Through making linkages between organisations and between people, and encouraging and supporting champions, we seek to add to the energy and momentum behind CLTS. We co-convene learning and sharing workshops collaboratively with other organisations. We seek to facilitate South-South exchanges, and the generation of insights leading to practical outputs. We synthesise, analyse and publish, and fund translations of key materials. We strive to be nimble and relevant and continuously alert in spotting how to make a difference.
The overarching aim of the Hub is to contribute to the dignity, health and wellbeing of children, women and men in the developing world who currently suffer the consequences of inadequate or no sanitation and poor hygiene.
History and Funding
Our work on CLTS, including the CLTS website (in its previous versions) was initially as part of the three year (2006-2009) DFID-funded research, action learning and networking project Going to Scale? The Potential of Community-led Total Sanitation . Until 31st December 2009, the action learning and networking aspect of this work continued as the project Sharing Lessons, Improving Practice: Maximising the potential of Community-Led Total Sanitation funded by Irish Aid From 1st January 2010 to the 30th September 2014, this work was funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Currently (2014-2019), the CLTS Knowledge Hub is funded by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency Sida.
Behaviour change Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Capacity development East Asia & Pacific Educators Enabling environment and institutional strengthening Global Health and hygiene Journalists Local NGO Peri-urban Practitioners Public awareness, advocacy and civil society engagement Rural
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danijela milosevic (milli)
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