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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • Reading Radar

    Sanitation and Water MDGs in the Middle East and North Africa: Missing the Target?

    December 9, 2011 By Lauren Herzer Risi
    Goal 7, Target 10 of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) is to “halve, by 2015, the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation.” The Joint Monitoring Programme (JMP), established by the UN to monitor progress towards this goal, has twice concluded (in 2008 and 2010) that the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) are in good shape to meet this target. However, a new article in Development and Change, “The Politics of Assessment: Water and Sanitation MDGs in the Middle East,” by Neda Zawahri, Jeannie Sowers, and Erika Weinthal, argues that the JMP’s “reliance on classifying ‘improved’ and ‘unimproved’ water and sanitation infrastructure, through infrequent household surveys, has produced misleading assessments that fail to capture the extensive water quality and sanitation problems plaguing the MENA.”

    The authors compared the findings of the JMP with a variety of data sources – participatory assessments, reports from other UN agencies, donor projects, domestic ministries and agencies, and academic research – and found major contradictions between the progress reported by the JMP and the situation on the ground. In one example, the authors write that “while the JMP considers piped household water as an improvement in water coverage, it fails to differentiate between ‘full’ coverage and ‘partial’ coverage, that is, household water supplies available only a few hours a week.” And the authors point out that according to UN-Habitat, “the availability of piped water does not necessarily translate into safe drinking water, as water may become contaminated before it reaches the tap.”

    As a result of the weakness of the indicators used by the JMP, household surveys conducted by the JMP in the MENA region “[do] not adequately capture the quality of drinking water,” the authors write, and efforts to address this inadequacy through more comprehensive testing of municipal water samples were deemed “too complex to be routinely employed through the world” and “prohibitively expensive.”

    “International organizations and national leaderships in the MENA lack substantial incentives to adopt more accurate assessments for safe water and sanitation,” Zawahri et al. conclude. The need to generate comparable data across time and space has trumped the importance of “gauging access, quality, and affordability of water and sanitation.”
    Topics: Africa, development, global health, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, MDGs, Middle East, Morocco, poverty, Reading Radar, sanitation, water
    • http://twitter.com/geoffdabelko Geoff Dabelko

      I think this is a really important piece of research that has challenging policy implications.  Really deserves wider attention.  Also a great example of the cost of the twisted incentive structure of academe ie these conclusions were known to the scholars for a couple of years (I heard it presented 2 years ago at the ISA convention) and they had to wait until it came out in peer review before able to share it widely.  A real shame given how it bears directly on policy questions – would be the kind of input needed at MDG review mtgs and national assessments.

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