THE EMERGING RIGHT TO SANITATION: SOCIO-ECONOMIC OR ENVIRONMENTAL RIGHT?

Similar documents
GUIDELINES FOR THE REALIZATION OF THE RIGHT TO DRINKING WATER AND SANITATION

INTRODUCTION IMPROVING SANITATION AND WATER QUALITY IN LOKO TOWN

WATER SANITATION, HEALTH AND HYGIENE PROGRAM LOCATION: IBADAN, S.W NIGERIA

Water supply and sanitation situation of Kalyanpur slum area in Dhaka

Economic and Social Council

Presented by. Julian Kyomuhangi Assistant Commissioner - EHD

End of project report for the Guernsey Overseas Aid Commission

The Health Benefits of Water Supply and Sanitation Investments

Low-cost Innovation in Water and Sanitation at a Local Level

Sanitation & Hygiene: Module on Childhood Diarrhea. The global picture. Designing an intervention in rural Zimbabwe.

PROJECT REPORT STRENGTHENING WATER AND SANITATION SITUATION. Initiated by MEDICARE HEALTH SERVICES SOCIETY

Accra, Ghana, November 2009 WEST AFRICA REGIONAL SANITATION AND HYGIENE SYMPOSIUM

WASH in Wetlands Where do we stand?

WATER, SANITATION AND HAND WASHING MODULE

WATER AND SANITATION AS AN INTEGRAL COMPONENT OF URBAN PLANNING

ACCESS TO IMPROVED SANITATION AND WASTEWATER TREATMENT

Manual on the Right to Water and Sanitation DRAFT RELEASED FOR REVIEW AND COMMENT: 4 AUGUST 2007

Exploring legal and policy aspects of urban sanitation and hygiene

Sanitation Technology Options in Lesotho

WASH and Learn! An Eastern Africa Community & School WASH Learning and Exchange Programme Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania

Preparing WASH Post 2015 and wealth quintile analysis Didier Allely Cristina Bianchessi

Vision 2030: The resilience of water supply and sanitation in the face of climate change Chee-Keong CHEW 28 October 2009

Defining Best and Worst- Case Bacterial Removals for a Home Water Treatment and Storage Unit

ACP-EU JOINT PARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY. Session document. Committee on Social Affairs and the Environment

COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION IN DEVELOPMENT, OPERATION AND MAINTENANCE OF WATER SUPPLY AND SEWERAGE SERVICES

Inter-Agency Rapid Health Assessment. The West Aceh Picture

Sanitary Survey in Gondar Town

Dry Ecological Sanitation Alternative in. Tanzania

A SUSTAINABLE TOILET SOLUTION TO FIGHT THE GLOBAL SANITATION CRISIS

Ways to realise the human rights to water and sanitation

Remarks by. H.E. Mr. John W. Ashe President of the 68 th Session of the United Nations General Assembly

Using tariff structures as a demand management instrument: The case of Kampala

Executive Summary. Thirsting for a Future: Water and children in a changing climate

Implementation of Sustainable Development Goals Regional Seminar on Integrated Approaches for SDG Planning. Fiji

Current. Issues. For GMT Review Only INVESTMENT PRIORITIES FOR SANITATION IN RURAL AREAS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. No. 4 June 2014

Urine diversion dehydration toilets in rural schools Yemen - Draft

A ROTARY PRIMER GLOBALOUTLOOK A ROTARIAN S GUIDE TO WATER AND SANITATION

Greywater Recycling Systems: Can These Systems Gain Public Support?

Ikano Group Partnership policy

Sanitation Systems, Technology Options, Hygiene and Health

Providing Safe Water and Sanitation to Families in Ethiopia

The Water Crisis: Affecting Women s Opportunity and Health. Mintamir is an eighteen-year-old woman from Amhara, Ethiopia. Every morning since

Sanitation for low-income rural communities in Nepal: Multi-Criteria Analysis and case studies

Inadequate Sanitation Costs Pakistan Billion PKR (US$5.7 Billion)

Right to Water and Sanitation 1 By Indira Khurana and Richard Mahapatra WaterAid India

CLEAN WATER & SANITATION E DUC ATIO N A L R ESO UR CE FO R TEACHERS AN D FACILITATO RS

SFD Promotion Initiative. SFD Manual

USAID FROM THE AMERICAN PEOPLE

ASSESSING ACCESS TO URBAN WASTE WATER MANAGEMENT SERVICES IN MAIDUGURI Abdullahi Babagana, Fandi Shettima Ali

Water and sanitation status relating to the poorest in Bangladesh

Liberia loses USD17.5 million annually due to poor sanitation

Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Programs

Current Status of Myanmar on Sewage and Sanitation

Integrating Gender Equality and Women s Empowerment into an Activity, Programme or Policy

INTERNATIONAL YEAR OF SANITATION 2008: OVERVIEW

OVERVIEW SOCIAL ACCEPTABILITY ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY

WASH advocacy and the Global Goals for Sustainable Development

SDG-6 and The Way Forward in Pakistan. By Kamran Naeem

Global Water Supply and Sanitation Assessment 2000 Report (UNICEF - WSSCC - WHO. unicef

Module 2 : System of Sanitation. Lecture 2 : System of Sanitation

Climate change impacts on WASH and slum community based adaptation measures

R E A LISING T H E H U M A N R IG H TS T O W A TER AND S A N ITATION: A HAN D B O O K Fr ameworks Frameworks 2

I Give a Shit Do You? NOVEMBER

Understanding pastoralists and their water, sanitation and hygiene needs

VISION IAS

Upgrading a settlement s water system: Zambia

40 The Double Pit Latrine

Water and Sanitation for All: Bringing the Issue Home

Water and Sanitation: Underpinning the Pillars of Sustainable Development in the context of a Green Economy

WATER AND ENVIRONMENTAL SANITATION PROJECTS MAINTENANCE ORGANISATION (WEPMO)

I SANITATION. WHA DISTRiCT LEADER 10KN0~*~ International Water.d Sanitation Centre ~ L~ iliti

ANNEX 11 WATER SUPPLY, SANITATION AND SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT

Water, Energy and Human Rights Wastewater reuse Environmental aspects

Missing the Millennium Development Goal targets for water and sanitation in urban areas

Healthy Villages. A guide for communities and community health workers

The Hotelbeds Group Supplier Code of Conduct. Guidance for suppliers to Hotelbeds Group and its subsidiaries ( Hotelbeds Group )

Rotary & Grundfos LIFELINK ROTARY FUNDRAISING CAMPAIGN WATER FOR THE WORLD PERFORMANCE MONITORING SUSTAINABLE WATER PROJECTS

Appendix G: Sanitation Project. Objective:

Policy Brief and Executive summary

Integrated Monitoring Guide for Sustainable Development Goal 6 on Water and Sanitation Targets and global indicators

ACF Knowledge, Attitude and Practice (KAP) survey report Essian IDP camp Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Promotion (WASH)

Report Panel 2.8 Water, Sanitation, Food Safety and Environmental Health

NO ONE LEFT BEHIND ENSURING EQUITABLE ACCESS TO WATER AND SANITATION

COUNTRY BACKGROUND - JAMAICA

CRITICAL ROLES OF WATER IN ACHIEVING PERSPECTIVE [WATER-ENERGY-FOOD- THE PROPOSED SDGS: A NEXUS CLIMATE CHANGE]

Africa User Research in Water & Sanitation

Corporate Social Responsibility as a Business

Economic and Social Council

asdf g Water for Life Decade [ ] or Life Decade [ ] UN-Water

A SOURCE OF WATER, A SOURCE OF HOPE

Sanitation beyond toilets: the challenge of new thinking and innovative technologies for water and sanitation

WFSGI CODE OF CONDUCT GUIDING PRINCIPLES APPROVED BY THE WFSGI GENERAL ASSEMBLY IN MUNICH, GERMANY, ON 23 RD JANUARY 2016

GLOBAL SANITATION SOLUTIONS Investing In A Better Future

Benefits of investing in water and sanitation

GROUP HUMAN RIGHTS POLICY

The Costs and Benefits of Sanitation (and Water) Services

WASH. Civil Society. Learning Fund WASH. In Challenging Urban Environments.

PreventionPracticesfromwaterBorneDiseasesWithinHouseholdsintheBamendankweMunicipalityNorthWestCameroon

Volume 4 of the World Health Organization s (WHO) Guidelines for the safe use

Transcription:

THE EMERGING RIGHT TO SANITATION: SOCIO-ECONOMIC OR ENVIRONMENTAL RIGHT? Loretta Feris Institute of Marine and Environmental Law University of Cape Town South Africa

The disposal of human wastes is a subject normally buried in euphemism and avoidance at least in public. Privately, every single person on the planet is intimately concerned on a dayto-day, even hour-to-hour, basis with the need to relieve themselves in a congenial place and fashion. The physiological necessity of excretion cannot be averted, even if it cannot be spoken of

Paper Outline Emergence of right: Right to Livelihood socio-economic in nature Connection to water Sanitation: History sustainable sanitation Sanitation as a human rights issue Environmental critique of the present conceptualisation of right to sanitation

Sanitation through the ages Around 1867BC residents of ancient Babylon already had indoor toilets connected to rudimentary sewer system Similar archaeological discoveries in Egypt, Crete and Rome Pit latrines utilising sand Western world required health threats such as cholera (and the Great Stink of 1858) to establish human waste disposal system - around 19 th century Water-borne the birth of the flush toilet

Today Sustainable sanitation systems Over-reliance on 2.6 billion people water-borne lacks adequate sanitation sewage Grey water systems Lack of sustainable water supply ww treatment works 1 billion no access at all Dry methods, i.e. Flush toilets Sewage - only systems 30% and Urine diverting of world treatment plants = population systems expensive to set-up, maintain, upgrade 1.8 million Do die we every really Cost-effective have year to diarrhoeal use diseases potable additional water 90% to benefits = = flush away spin-off human ventures children under 5 excreta??

Sanitation as a human rights issue Right to dignity Right to equality Equality of dignity Right to bodily integrity and right to life Right to health Right to housing Right to education Right to water Right to a healthy environment

The emergence of an international human right to sanitation Only explicit reference to a right to sanitation: The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Clear Against socio-womeeconomic (CEDAW) Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) dimensions July 2010 - UN General Assembly for the first time recognised a right to sanitation Affirmed by HR Council - declared the right to safe and clean drinking water and sanitation as a human right that is essential for the full enjoyment of life and all human rights derived from article 11 right to livelihood

Special Rapporteur Mandate: to clarify the content of human rights obligations, including non-discrimination obligations, in relation to access to safe drinking water and sanitation Defines sanitation as a system for the collection, transport, treatment and disposal or reuse of human excreta and associated hygiene Acknowledges inter-connectedness with right to other human rights, especially dignity But - right innately linked to water = the right to water and sanitation Rationale waterborne sewerage systems are common in many parts of the world and without proper sanitation, human excreta contaminate drinking water sources, affecting water quality and leading to disastrous health consequences

Criteria for right Availability: The human right to water is limited to personal and domestic uses and foresees a supply for each person that must be sufficient for these purposes. Likewise, a sufficient number of sanitation facilities has to be available. Quality: Water has to be safe for consumption and other uses, so that it is no threat to human health. Sanitation facilities must be hygienically and technically safe to use. To ensure hygiene, access to water for cleansing and hand washing after use is essential. Acceptability: Sanitation facilities, in particular, have to be culturally acceptable. This will often require gender-specific facilities, constructed in a way that ensures privacy and dignity. Accessibility: Water and sanitation services must be accessible to everyone in the household or its vicinity on a continuous basis. Physical security must not be threatened when accessing facilities. Affordability: Access to sanitation and water must not compromise the ability to pay for other essential necessities guaranteed by human rights such as food, housing and health care.

The right to sanitation a flawed conception Any acknowledgment of the role of the environment and consequences of sanitation for the environment is nowhere has been decidedly absent Conceptualised a socio-economic right right to livelihood Interpreted as connected to water purely as a socio-economic right

Ideal: sustainability Flawed conception (2) Connection to water ignores water as ecosystem Ignores sustainability requirements: availability, inadequacy of supply systems, affordability, culturally appropriate Socio-economic status of right - right has to be interpreted within context & according to limitations that apply to these rights: Availability of financial means Progressive realisation Strong international support for core minimum content Adapted from Nel

Right to Sustainable Sanitation First prize: stand alone right to sustainable sanitation Realism: Re-interpretation of right: Divorced from water as only way to give effect to right Sustainability requirements which includes acknowledgement of centrality of environment