Hello, and welcome to this MOOC on water supply and
sanitation policy in developing countries.
This is part two, entitled Developing Effective Policy Interventions.
My name is Dale Whittington.
I'm a professor at the Alliance Manchester Business School in the UK and
at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill in the United States And
I'm a visiting professor at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at
the National University of Singapore.
>> Hello, I'm Duncan Thomas, a lecturer at the Alliance Manchester Business School.
In this MOOC we're going to help you to understand the political, economic,
social and technical dimensions of some of the most promising policy interventions
that have been proposed to solve global water and sanitation problems.
This is important because about half a billion people on our planet
still lack access to improved water supplies.
And about 2 billion do not have improved sanitation services.
>> In this part two we will look at some of the policy interventions that donors,
national governments and water utilities have tried to improve water and
sanitation conditions around the world.
We'll critically study what lessons can be learned from these experiences.
Current water and sanitation conditions cause an unknown but
very large number of avoidable deaths each year from water-related diseases.
Millions of dollars are spent on avoidable healthcare expenses and
billions of hours are wasted by people, mostly women,
carrying water from sources outside the home.
Reducing these huge costs to associated with poor water and sanitation services is
one of the major global challenges for us all in the 21st century.
>> Technologies to provide networked water and sanitation services are well known.
But for decades the international community and national governments have
struggled to find the right institutional and financial arrangements to provide
these technologies to poor households in developing countries.
>> This MOOC is therefore not a simple overview of technologies that could be
used to improve water and sanitation conditions around the world,
in mega cities, peri-urban slums, and rural communities.
We must look at how efforts to improve water and
sanitation conditions are embedded in institutions and guided by policy.
>> In this part two we'll examine six main types of water and
sanitation policy interventions spread across seven sessions of content.
>> I've spent over 40 years of my career studying water and
sanitation policy and planning issues in low and middle income countries.
I've worked on these issues in over 25 countries for the World Bank,
the Asian Development Bank, OECD and the United States Agency for
International Development.
And I've served on the technical committee of the Global Water Partnership in
Stockholm, Sweden.
And the Global Water Partnership has endorsed this MOOC.
I'm also chair of the board of the Environment for
Development Network based in Gothenburg, Sweden.
We have EFD research centers in Kenya, Tanzania, Ethiopia, South Africa,
Costa Rica, Columbia, Chile, India, China and Vietnam, with active research
programs and environmental policy issues, including water and sanitation.
>> I've researched water and innovation issues for around 15 years.
And I've advised water utility leaders, water sector suppliers, regulators and
policy makers in the UK and Europe.
>> Our MOOC features video lectures and interactive elements and you'll get to
read some of the most influential, thought provoking papers in this field.
We will discuss case studies from many different developing countries.
And then we will use these cases to illustrate available evidence about
the effectiveness of different policy interventions.
You will also be able to watch interviews with leading water and
sanitation experts from around the world about the challenging situations they face
and the policy interventions they think are most effective.
>> In this MOOC we hope you'll develop skills to understand how to tackle
a complex controversial policy problem, one that has no simple easy answers.
You'll learn that the evidence policy makers need is sometimes missing or
controversial.
You'll be able to assess better the quality of evidence and
how to reach sound, policy relevant conclusions.
And you'll discuss issues with your fellow learners who may have very different
perspectives from yours On the global water and sanitation challenges and
the effectiveness of different policy interventions.
>> Our part one MOOC on water and sanitation was first offered in 2014.
Over 17,000 learners from around 185 countries joined us.
If you were one of them, we look forward to welcome you back for this part two.
If you have not taken already part one,
you are still very welcome to start with part two.
However, you will find that part two relies on a conceptual framework for
policy analysis that we introduced in part one.
So you may want to take part one before starting this part two.
It's entirely up to you.
We hope you enjoy this MOOC.