Strengthening the Human Right to Sanitation as an Instrument for Inclusive Development

£115.00

Strengthening the Human Right to Sanitation as an Instrument for Inclusive Development

Energy industries and utilities Hydrology and the hydrosphere Civil engineering, surveying and building

Author: Pedi Obani

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Collection: IHE Delft PhD Thesis Series

Language: English

Published by: CRC Press

Published on: 3rd May 2018

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 8 Mb

ISBN: 9780429865978


Introduction

Over a third of the current 7.3 billion people worldwide are burdened with poor sanitation services. The resulting social, relational and ecological exclusion make the realisation of the human right to sanitation (HRS) a critical concern development concern. However, the literature has evolved in a largely compartmentalised manner, focusing on the formal recognition of the HRS in domestic legal systems, without sufficiently addressing the drivers of poor sanitation services.

Case Study and Findings

This research expounds on the impact of the HRS on human wellbeing and the environment within the context of a developing country like Nigeria as a case study. The findings show that contrary to the focus in the literature, the drivers of poor sanitation services are not confined to legal factors, such as the formal recognition of the HRS within domestic legal systems. Rather, the drivers include social, economic and environmental limitations to improved sanitation services.

Conclusion and Recommendations

Based on the findings, the book argues that the focus in the literature on the formal recognition of the HRS in national legal systems is insufficient for tackling the main drivers of poor sanitation services. It is therefore necessary to reformulate the HRS discourse using complementary governance instruments that advance social, relational and ecological inclusion.

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