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South Asia Occasional Paper Series 2:
Sanitation in India - Progress, Differences, Correlates, and Challenges

South Asia Occasional Paper Series

ISBN: 978-971-561-828-1
Publication Date: October 2009
Free

Poor sanitation is responsible for the spread of a number of communicable diseases, resulting in lost productivity, reduced quality of life, and improvishment. Sanitation is one of the most cost-effective ways to improve public health. Using nationally representative data sets, the report presents analyses of progress, differentials, correlates, and challenges of sanitation in India, and discusses the policy implications of the findings. While significant progress has been achieved in the last decade, the scale of unmet need for sanitation in India is huge. Greater attention on the disadvantaged- households from the poorest quintile and scheduled tribes - and the states that have consistently underperformed could help accelerate further progress.


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Contents


Foreword, Contents, Abbreviations

Introduction

Data and Methods

Findings

Discussion

References

Appendix