Enabling Environment Endline Assessment : Indonesia
The Water and Sanitation Program (WSP) has implemented the Global Scaling up Rural Sanitation Project since 2007. One of the central objectives of the project is to improve sanitation at a scale sufficient to meet the 2015 sanitation Millennium Dev...
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Format: | Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2011/11/16647332/enabling-environment-endline-assessment-indonesia http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17345 |
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oai_dc |
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Digital Repository |
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Foreign Institution |
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World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
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World Bank |
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English en_US |
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ACCESS TO SANITATION ADEQUATE HUMAN RESOURCES AIR POLLUTION AIR QUALITY BASIC HEALTH BASIC SANITATION BEHAVIOR CHANGE CAPACITY BUILDING COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK DEVELOPED COUNTRIES DEVELOPMENT PLANNING DIARRHEA DISEASES DISSEMINATION DRINKING WATER ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC INCENTIVES ECONOMIES OF SCALE EFFECTIVE USE ENVIRONMENTAL ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY ENVIRONMENTAL SANITATION FINANCIAL COMMITMENTS GOVERNMENT AGENCIES GOVERNMENT CAPACITY GOVERNMENT SUPPORT HANDS WITH SOAP HANDWASHING HEALTH CENTRE HEALTH OUTCOMES HEALTH RISK HEALTHY ENVIRONMENT HOME AFFAIRS HOUSEHOLD LATRINE HOUSEHOLD LATRINES HUMAN EXCRETA HUMAN SETTLEMENTS HYGIENE HYGIENE BEHAVIOR HYGIENE BEHAVIORS HYGIENE IMPROVEMENT INADEQUATE SANITATION INCENTIVE SYSTEMS INFANT INFANT DEATHS INFANT MORTALITY INFANT MORTALITY RATE INFECTION RATES INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY LATRINE CONSTRUCTION LIVE BIRTHS LIVING CONDITIONS LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOW-INCOME COMMUNITIES MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS MASS MEDIA MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOAL MINISTRY OF HEALTH NATIONAL ACTION NATIONAL ACTION PLAN NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN NATIONAL LEVEL NATIONAL POLICY NATIONAL PROGRESS NATIONAL STRATEGY NUMBER OF HOUSEHOLDS NUTRITION OFFICIAL LANGUAGE POLICY FORMULATION POLICY IMPLICATIONS POLITICAL ECONOMY POLITICAL SUPPORT POOR SANITATION POPULATION GROWTH PROGRESS PUBLIC AWARENESS PUBLIC EXPENDITURES PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION RESOURCE ALLOCATIONS RURAL AREAS RURAL COMMUNITIES RURAL HOUSEHOLDS RURAL POPULATION RURAL SANITATION RURAL SANITATION COVERAGE RURAL WATER RURAL WATER SUPPLY SAFETY SANITATION SANITATION ACTIVITIES SANITATION COVERAGE SANITATION DATA SANITATION FACILITIES SANITATION FACILITY SANITATION IMPROVEMENT SANITATION IMPROVEMENTS SANITATION INFRASTRUCTURE SANITATION INTERVENTIONS SANITATION POLICIES SANITATION PROGRAMS SANITATION PROJECTS SANITATION PROMOTION SANITATION SECTOR SANITATION SERVICE SANITATION SERVICES SANITATION SITUATION SERVICE PROVIDERS SERVICE PROVISION SIGNIFICANT POLICY SOCIAL CONDITIONS SOLID WASTE SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT SUSTAINABLE ACCESS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TOTAL SANITATION TRADITIONAL LATRINES TRANSPORTATION URBAN AREAS URBAN POPULATION URBAN SANITATION WASTE MANAGEMENT WATER POLLUTION WATER SANITATION WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION |
spellingShingle |
ACCESS TO SANITATION ADEQUATE HUMAN RESOURCES AIR POLLUTION AIR QUALITY BASIC HEALTH BASIC SANITATION BEHAVIOR CHANGE CAPACITY BUILDING COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK DEVELOPED COUNTRIES DEVELOPMENT PLANNING DIARRHEA DISEASES DISSEMINATION DRINKING WATER ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC INCENTIVES ECONOMIES OF SCALE EFFECTIVE USE ENVIRONMENTAL ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY ENVIRONMENTAL SANITATION FINANCIAL COMMITMENTS GOVERNMENT AGENCIES GOVERNMENT CAPACITY GOVERNMENT SUPPORT HANDS WITH SOAP HANDWASHING HEALTH CENTRE HEALTH OUTCOMES HEALTH RISK HEALTHY ENVIRONMENT HOME AFFAIRS HOUSEHOLD LATRINE HOUSEHOLD LATRINES HUMAN EXCRETA HUMAN SETTLEMENTS HYGIENE HYGIENE BEHAVIOR HYGIENE BEHAVIORS HYGIENE IMPROVEMENT INADEQUATE SANITATION INCENTIVE SYSTEMS INFANT INFANT DEATHS INFANT MORTALITY INFANT MORTALITY RATE INFECTION RATES INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY LATRINE CONSTRUCTION LIVE BIRTHS LIVING CONDITIONS LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOW-INCOME COMMUNITIES MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS MASS MEDIA MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOAL MINISTRY OF HEALTH NATIONAL ACTION NATIONAL ACTION PLAN NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN NATIONAL LEVEL NATIONAL POLICY NATIONAL PROGRESS NATIONAL STRATEGY NUMBER OF HOUSEHOLDS NUTRITION OFFICIAL LANGUAGE POLICY FORMULATION POLICY IMPLICATIONS POLITICAL ECONOMY POLITICAL SUPPORT POOR SANITATION POPULATION GROWTH PROGRESS PUBLIC AWARENESS PUBLIC EXPENDITURES PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION RESOURCE ALLOCATIONS RURAL AREAS RURAL COMMUNITIES RURAL HOUSEHOLDS RURAL POPULATION RURAL SANITATION RURAL SANITATION COVERAGE RURAL WATER RURAL WATER SUPPLY SAFETY SANITATION SANITATION ACTIVITIES SANITATION COVERAGE SANITATION DATA SANITATION FACILITIES SANITATION FACILITY SANITATION IMPROVEMENT SANITATION IMPROVEMENTS SANITATION INFRASTRUCTURE SANITATION INTERVENTIONS SANITATION POLICIES SANITATION PROGRAMS SANITATION PROJECTS SANITATION PROMOTION SANITATION SECTOR SANITATION SERVICE SANITATION SERVICES SANITATION SITUATION SERVICE PROVIDERS SERVICE PROVISION SIGNIFICANT POLICY SOCIAL CONDITIONS SOLID WASTE SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT SUSTAINABLE ACCESS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TOTAL SANITATION TRADITIONAL LATRINES TRANSPORTATION URBAN AREAS URBAN POPULATION URBAN SANITATION WASTE MANAGEMENT WATER POLLUTION WATER SANITATION WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION Robinson, Andy Enabling Environment Endline Assessment : Indonesia |
geographic_facet |
East Asia and Pacific Indonesia |
relation |
Water and sanitation program working paper;WSP |
description |
The Water and Sanitation Program (WSP)
has implemented the Global Scaling up Rural Sanitation
Project since 2007. One of the central objectives of the
project is to improve sanitation at a scale sufficient to
meet the 2015 sanitation Millennium Developmental Goal (MDG)
targets in Indonesia, India, and Tanzania. The baseline
assessment of the enabling environment was completed in July
and August 2007, during the start-up phase of the overall
project. This follow up endline assessment was carried out
three years later in mid-2010. This report presents the main
findings and recommendations from the endline assessment of
the ability of the enabling environment to scale up,
sustain, and replicate sanitation improvements in East Java,
Indonesia. Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) was
introduced into Indonesia in May 2005 through field trials
in six provinces.The remarkable success of these
field trials, implemented with assistance from the Ministry
of Health (MoH) and two of its large rural water supply and
sanitation programs, caused the CLTS approach to spread to
several hundred additional communities, generated
significant demand from other districts, and led to its
subsequent adoption as the main methodology for sanitation
improvement in several large sector programs. Sanitation
remains a local government responsibility, and as a result
the decentralized and demand-responsive approach adopted by
the project in East Java has proved highly appropriate and
effective. In the absence of any larger central programs,
district governments were convinced to use their own
institutions and resources to implement the project,
resulting in sustainable arrangements and finance,
cost-effective use of local resources, as well as proactive
efforts to learn from others, innovate, and develop locally
appropriate approaches. The private resource agencies
contracted by the project were effective in supporting the
districts during this learning and development phase, and
most district governments now appear to be confident in
managing and sustaining their rural sanitation programs.
There is increasing consensus nationally that total
sanitation and sanitation marketing approaches are effective
program methodologies, with most rural sanitation programs
in Indonesia now utilizing some form of total sanitation
approach and many showing interest in developing a
sanitation marketing component. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Working Paper |
author |
Robinson, Andy |
author_facet |
Robinson, Andy |
author_sort |
Robinson, Andy |
title |
Enabling Environment Endline Assessment : Indonesia |
title_short |
Enabling Environment Endline Assessment : Indonesia |
title_full |
Enabling Environment Endline Assessment : Indonesia |
title_fullStr |
Enabling Environment Endline Assessment : Indonesia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Enabling Environment Endline Assessment : Indonesia |
title_sort |
enabling environment endline assessment : indonesia |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2011/11/16647332/enabling-environment-endline-assessment-indonesia http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17345 |
_version_ |
1764436437413920768 |
spelling |
okr-10986-173452021-04-23T14:03:36Z Enabling Environment Endline Assessment : Indonesia Robinson, Andy ACCESS TO SANITATION ADEQUATE HUMAN RESOURCES AIR POLLUTION AIR QUALITY BASIC HEALTH BASIC SANITATION BEHAVIOR CHANGE CAPACITY BUILDING COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK DEVELOPED COUNTRIES DEVELOPMENT PLANNING DIARRHEA DISEASES DISSEMINATION DRINKING WATER ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC INCENTIVES ECONOMIES OF SCALE EFFECTIVE USE ENVIRONMENTAL ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY ENVIRONMENTAL SANITATION FINANCIAL COMMITMENTS GOVERNMENT AGENCIES GOVERNMENT CAPACITY GOVERNMENT SUPPORT HANDS WITH SOAP HANDWASHING HEALTH CENTRE HEALTH OUTCOMES HEALTH RISK HEALTHY ENVIRONMENT HOME AFFAIRS HOUSEHOLD LATRINE HOUSEHOLD LATRINES HUMAN EXCRETA HUMAN SETTLEMENTS HYGIENE HYGIENE BEHAVIOR HYGIENE BEHAVIORS HYGIENE IMPROVEMENT INADEQUATE SANITATION INCENTIVE SYSTEMS INFANT INFANT DEATHS INFANT MORTALITY INFANT MORTALITY RATE INFECTION RATES INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY LATRINE CONSTRUCTION LIVE BIRTHS LIVING CONDITIONS LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOW-INCOME COMMUNITIES MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS MASS MEDIA MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOAL MINISTRY OF HEALTH NATIONAL ACTION NATIONAL ACTION PLAN NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN NATIONAL LEVEL NATIONAL POLICY NATIONAL PROGRESS NATIONAL STRATEGY NUMBER OF HOUSEHOLDS NUTRITION OFFICIAL LANGUAGE POLICY FORMULATION POLICY IMPLICATIONS POLITICAL ECONOMY POLITICAL SUPPORT POOR SANITATION POPULATION GROWTH PROGRESS PUBLIC AWARENESS PUBLIC EXPENDITURES PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION RESOURCE ALLOCATIONS RURAL AREAS RURAL COMMUNITIES RURAL HOUSEHOLDS RURAL POPULATION RURAL SANITATION RURAL SANITATION COVERAGE RURAL WATER RURAL WATER SUPPLY SAFETY SANITATION SANITATION ACTIVITIES SANITATION COVERAGE SANITATION DATA SANITATION FACILITIES SANITATION FACILITY SANITATION IMPROVEMENT SANITATION IMPROVEMENTS SANITATION INFRASTRUCTURE SANITATION INTERVENTIONS SANITATION POLICIES SANITATION PROGRAMS SANITATION PROJECTS SANITATION PROMOTION SANITATION SECTOR SANITATION SERVICE SANITATION SERVICES SANITATION SITUATION SERVICE PROVIDERS SERVICE PROVISION SIGNIFICANT POLICY SOCIAL CONDITIONS SOLID WASTE SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT SUSTAINABLE ACCESS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TOTAL SANITATION TRADITIONAL LATRINES TRANSPORTATION URBAN AREAS URBAN POPULATION URBAN SANITATION WASTE MANAGEMENT WATER POLLUTION WATER SANITATION WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION The Water and Sanitation Program (WSP) has implemented the Global Scaling up Rural Sanitation Project since 2007. One of the central objectives of the project is to improve sanitation at a scale sufficient to meet the 2015 sanitation Millennium Developmental Goal (MDG) targets in Indonesia, India, and Tanzania. The baseline assessment of the enabling environment was completed in July and August 2007, during the start-up phase of the overall project. This follow up endline assessment was carried out three years later in mid-2010. This report presents the main findings and recommendations from the endline assessment of the ability of the enabling environment to scale up, sustain, and replicate sanitation improvements in East Java, Indonesia. Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) was introduced into Indonesia in May 2005 through field trials in six provinces.The remarkable success of these field trials, implemented with assistance from the Ministry of Health (MoH) and two of its large rural water supply and sanitation programs, caused the CLTS approach to spread to several hundred additional communities, generated significant demand from other districts, and led to its subsequent adoption as the main methodology for sanitation improvement in several large sector programs. Sanitation remains a local government responsibility, and as a result the decentralized and demand-responsive approach adopted by the project in East Java has proved highly appropriate and effective. In the absence of any larger central programs, district governments were convinced to use their own institutions and resources to implement the project, resulting in sustainable arrangements and finance, cost-effective use of local resources, as well as proactive efforts to learn from others, innovate, and develop locally appropriate approaches. The private resource agencies contracted by the project were effective in supporting the districts during this learning and development phase, and most district governments now appear to be confident in managing and sustaining their rural sanitation programs. There is increasing consensus nationally that total sanitation and sanitation marketing approaches are effective program methodologies, with most rural sanitation programs in Indonesia now utilizing some form of total sanitation approach and many showing interest in developing a sanitation marketing component. 2014-03-24T22:00:17Z 2014-03-24T22:00:17Z 2011-11 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2011/11/16647332/enabling-environment-endline-assessment-indonesia http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17345 English en_US Water and sanitation program working paper;WSP CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper Publications & Research East Asia and Pacific Indonesia |