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.
Ten years after a community-led total sanitation campaign, intervention households continued to have higher rates of ever owning a latrine but... Read more...
Slippage is an expected aspect of behaviour change-oriented sanitation and hygiene interventions, especially those at scale, and not a sign of... Read more...
This guidebook introduces rural and small water and wastewater systems in the United States to ten key areas of effectively managed systems. Read more...
This factsheet presents a summary of the key findings relating to water supply, sanitation and hygiene infrastructure and the services received by... Read more...
This factsheet presents a summary of the key findings relating to water supply, sanitation and hygiene infrastructure and the services received by... Read more...
This factsheet presents a summary of key findings relating to water supply, sanitation and hygiene infrastructure and the services received by... Read more...
This factsheet presents a summary of the key findings relating to water supply, sanitation and hygiene infrastructure and the services received by... Read more...
Power point presentation on paying more attention to the whole sanitation chain. Putting more focus on leadership for change. Putting more emphasis... Read more...
This working paper provides a comprehensive summary of the historical development of Sri Lanka's urban water and sanitation sectors together with a... Read more...
Emerging lessons from the use of building blocks for sustainable un-sewered urban sanitation in sub-Saharan Africa. Read more...
The challenge to WSS practitioners now is to deliver sustainable sanitation services to more than two billion people by 2015. Read more...