33 research outputs found
The Sustainable Development Goal on Water and Sanitation
Target 7c of the Millennium Development Goals (MDG 7c) aimed to halve the population that had no sustainable access to water and basic sanitation before 2015. According to the data collected by the Joint Monitoring Programme in charge of measuring progress towards MDG 7c, 2.6 billion people gained access to safe water and 2.3 billion people to basic sanitation. Despite these optimistic figures, many academics have criticised MDG 7c. We provide an overview of this critique by performing a systematic literature review of 61 studies conducted over the MDG implementation period (2002-2015) and shortly after. Our objective is to contribute to the debate on the operationalisation of the Sustainable Development Goal on water and sanitation (SDG 6). The academic debate on MDG 7c mainly focused on the effectiveness of the indicators for safe water and sanitation and on the political dynamics underlying the selection of these indicators. SDG 6 addresses some of the concerns raised on the indicators for safe water and sanitation but fails to acknowledge the politics of indicator setting. We are proposing additional indicators and reflect on the limitations of using only quantitative indicators to measure progress towards SDG 6
Research Protocol
Target 7c of the Millennium Development Goals (MDG 7c) aimed to halve the population that had no sustainable access to water and basic sanitation before 2015. According to the data collected by the Joint Monitoring Programme in charge of measuring progress towards MDG 7c, 2.6 billion people gained access to safe water and 2.3 billion people to basic sanitation. Despite these optimistic figures, many academics have criticised MDG 7c. We provide an overview of this critique by performing a systematic literature review of 62 studies conducted over the MDG implementation period (2002-2015) and shortly after. Our objective is to contribute to the debate on the operationalisation of the Sustainable Development Goal on water and sanitation (SDG 6). The academic debate on MDG 7c mainly focused on the effectiveness of the indicators for safe water and sanitation and on the political dynamics underlying the selection of these indicators. SDG 6 addresses some of the concerns raised on the indicators for safe water and sanitation but fails to acknowledge the politics of indicator setting. We are proposing additional indicators and reflect on the limitations of using only quantitative indicators to measure progress towards SDG 6
The Sustainable Development Goal on Water and Sanitation
Target 7c of the Millennium Development Goals (MDG 7c) aimed to halve the population
that had no sustainable access to water and basic sanitation before 2015. According
to the data collected by the Joint Monitoring Programme in charge of measuring progress
towards MDG 7c, 2.6 billion people gained access to safe water and 2.3 billion people to
basic sanitation. Despite these optimistic figures, many academics have criticised MDG
7c. We provide an overview of this critique by performing a systematic literature review
of 62 studies conducted over the MDG implementation period (2002–2015) and shortly
after. Our objective is to contribute to the debate on the operationalisation of the Sustainable
Development Goal on water and sanitation (SDG 6). The academic debate on MDG
7c mainly focused on the effectiveness of the indicators for safe water and sanitation and on
the political dynamics underlying the selection of these indicators. SDG 6 addresses some
of the concerns raised on the indicators for safe water and sanitation but fails to acknowledge
the politics of indicator setting. We are proposing additional indicators and reflect on
the limitations of using only quantitative indicators to measure progress towards SDG 6
Governance or Poverty Reduction? Assessing Budget Support in Nicaragua
__Abstract__
General Budget Support (GBS) is assumed to lead to more effective poverty
reduction through non-earmarking of the money and through recipient country
ownership. A second and more hidden objective of GBS, however, is to influence
policies and governance of recipient countries. This paper develops an evaluation
framework that takes the tensions between these two objectives into account. It then
assesses the results of GBS in Nicaragua under two administrations. It concludes
that for most donors, the aim of improving governance was more important than
poverty reduction, in both government periods, thus reducing the effect of GBS on
poverty reduction. In addition, donor influence on governance was limited