Martin is an expert in participatory approaches for training, learning and monitoring with over 10 years’ experience working with civil society organisations and local governments. Martin brings to the team six years’ experience in the rural water sector focusing on promotion of sustainable approaches, building coalitions and learning alliances to influence sector wide changes. Martin holds a Master’s degree in Organizational Psychology, a Bachelor of Arts degree with Education and a Post Graduate Certificate in Monitoring and Evaluation, all from Makerere University.
The two utility models present in Kabarole outperformed the community management model, with the existing national utility demonstrating greater... Read more...
A strong enabling environment, which recognizes small communities and their local services, water quality control, post-construction support and the... Read more...
Ten years after a community-led total sanitation campaign, intervention households continued to have higher rates of ever owning a latrine but... Read more...
This review is the first comprehensive evaluation of the External support programs (ESP) literature. It derives a definition of external support... Read more...
Neither rural sustainability checks, nor urban benchmarking frameworks, are entirely suitable for monitoring small town water services. Read more...
What is needed to find out whether a combination of centralised and decentralised systems generates more sustainable and resilient urban water... Read more...
In Chennai, India, stakeholders support the establishment of an independent state groundwater authority to secure sustainable water supply. Read more...
Sustainable groundwater use is more likely in Indian villages if farmers, other village community members and NGOs work together with researchers and... Read more...