Aguaconsult regularly networks with a range of institutions
and organisations that are active in the same thematic areas and share
common approaches and practices in furthering international development.
We encourage you to visit them at the following websites:
ALNAP
http://www.alnap.org/
Established in 1997, the Active Learning Network for Accountability
and Performance in Humanitarian Action (ALNAP) is an international
interagency forum working to improve learning, accountability
and quality across
the Humanitarian Sector.
BPD Water and Sanitation
http//:www.bpdws.org
BPD Water and Sanitation is an informal network of partners who
seek to demonstrate that strategic partnerships involving business,
government
and civil society can achieve more at the local level to improve
access to safe water and effective sanitation for the poor than
any of the
groups acting individually.
CINARA, Universidad de Valle, Cali, Colombia
http://www.cinara.org.co/
CINARA (Instituto de Investigación y Desarrollo en Agua Potable,
Saneamiento Básico y Conservación de Recursos Hídricos)
is based at the University of Valle in Colombia. Its aim is to
contribute to the improvement of the quality of life, through
integrated reseach,
development and transfer of technologies and working methodologies
in the sector of water and sanitation.
ECHO Evaluation Department
http://europa.eu.int/comm/echo/evaluation/index_en.htm
Since ECHO was created in 1992, it has had an evaluation
function which is independent of its operational units, and which
is responsible
for
evaluating the activities funded by the Office; the aim of this
department is to regularly assess humanitarian aid operations
financed by the
European Community in order to establish whether they have achieved
their objectives
and to produce guidelines for improving the effectiveness of
subsequent operations.
Environmental Health Project
http://www.ehproject.org/default.htm
The Environmental Health Project (EHP) began a second five-year
contract in June 1999 under the direction of the Office
of Health, Infectious
Diseases and Nutrition in USAID’s Bureau for Global
Health. For many years EHP has been one of the leading global
centres
of excellence
for issues relating to water supply, sanitation and environmental
health preventive components in health or environment programs,
while advancing
the state-of-the-art of these components. This website provides
access to a large number of electronic reports, including
the recent work on
institutional support mechanisms.
International Federation of the Red
Cross and Red Crescent Societies
http://www.ifrc.org/
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent
Societies is the world's largest humanitarian organization,
providing
assistance without discrimination as to nationality, race,
religious beliefs,
class or political opinions. The Federation carries out relief
operations to assist victims of disasters, and combines this
with development
work
to strengthen the capacities of its member National Societies.
The Federation's work focuses on four core areas: promoting
humanitarian values, disaster
response, disaster preparedness, and health and community care.
IRC
International Centre for Water and Sanitation
http://www.irc.nl/index.php
The IRC is a specialist
centre based in the Netherlands, providing news and information,
advice, research and training, on low-cost
water supply
and sanitation in developing countries. The IRC website
offers access to many reports and documents on the subject
of community
management
and also is linked to the Thematic Group on Scaling Up website
as well as a site dedicated to community management issues,
drawing together research lessons and practical experience
from around
the
world (www.irc.nl/manage).
The site contains a useful on-line documentation centre.
Thematic
Group
on Scaling Up of Community Managed Rural Water Supply
www.irc.nl/scalingup
The goal of the group is to contribute to the increased impact
of water supply programmes on people's livelihoods through
increased coverage,
greater sustainability and improved demand responsiveness
of rural water supply systems. The website provides details
about
the aims
and objectives
of the group, news about on-going activities and links to
members of the group and key documents on the subject.
Pan American Health
Organisation
http://www.paho.org/
The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) was founded in
1902 and is the world's oldest international public health
agency
working to
improve the health and well being of people in the Americas.
PAHO's mission is to provide technical cooperation and advice
to its
Member States and other partners in order to promote equity
in health,
combat disease and improve the quality of life of the peoples
of the Americas.
REDR
http://www.redr.org/
Registered Engineers for Disaster Relief (REDR) was established
in 1979 and is now an international charity working to relieve
suffering in
disasters by selecting, training and providing competent and
effective relief personnel to humanitarian aid agencies world-wide.
UNDAC
http://ochaonline.un.org/webpage.asp?Page=552
The United Nations Disaster Assessment and Coordination (UNDAC)
team is a stand-by team of disaster management professionals
who are nominated
and funded by member governments, OCHA, UNDP and operational
humanitarian United Nations Agencies such as WFP, UNICEF and WHO.
Upon request
of a disaster-stricken country, the UNDAC team can be deployed
within hours
to carry out rapid assessment of priority needs and to support
national Authorities and the United Nations Resident Coordinator
to coordinate
international relief on-site.
WaterAid
www.wateraid.org.uk
WaterAid is an international NGO dedicated exclusively to the
sustainable provision of safe domestic water, sanitation and
hygiene education
to the world’s
poorest people. Their site has information on a range of research activities,
which currently include work on financing of the MDGs, as well as access
to reports and country programme profiles.
Water, Engineering and Development Centre
http://www.lboro.ac.uk/wedc
WEDC is one of the world's leading institutions concerned with
the planning, provision and management of physical infrastructure
for
development in
low- and middle-income countries. This website has a comprehensive
section on
water and
sanitation, including access to research projects and historical documentation
from the well-known annual WEDC conferences held every year, either
in Africa or Asia, concerning many aspects of water and sanitation
in low-income
countries.
Water
and Sanitation Programme
http://www.wsp.org/
WSP is an international partnership to help the poor gain sustained
access to improved water supply and sanitation services. Administered
by The
World Bank,
WSP works to meet the Millennium Development Goals for water and sanitation:
to halve the proportion of people without access to safe drinking water
and basic sanitation by 2015. Over the past two decades, WSP has led
or supported
many
of the advances made within the sector, and actively contributes to
the growing understanding of how to translate the guiding principles
agreed
upon at major
international conferences into improved policies and programs.
Water Supply
and Sanitation Collaborative Council
http://www.wsscc.org/
The WSSCC was formed at the end of the United Nations International
Drinking Water and Sanitation Decade (1981-1990) to provide a framework
for collaboration
between sector agencies in both developed and developing countries.
Their website includes publications, information on Vision 21, activities
of
the Council
and links to other initiatives, as well as on-line publications.
World Bank
Rural
Water Supply and Sanitation
http://www.worldbank.org/watsan/rural.html
This website is part of the World Bank’s water and sanitation sector site
and offers basic principles for rural water and sanitation services projects,
along with some good publications and resources on the topics of demand-responsive
approaches, management options and promoting sustainability. It also includes
access to a number of useful web-based “tool-kits” which
can be downloaded directly. |