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2016 World Water Week programme

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Smart subsidy for sanitation: Experimental and applied evidence of success<br />

Introduction<br />

Convenor: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, The <strong>World</strong> Bank Group and Thrive Networks / East Meets West<br />

Room: FH 307<br />

Room: FH 202<br />

This event will offer an exploration of the use of smart subsidies to increase the adoption of improved sanitation among the rural poor in<br />

the developing world. It will examine several field experiments and implementation projects that have creatively deployed direct financial<br />

incentives, targeted at households, communities, and institutions.<br />

09:00 Welcome<br />

Jan-Willem Rosenboom, the Bill<br />

& Melinda Gates Foundation<br />

09:05 The use of subsidies to<br />

promote latrine use in<br />

Bangladesh and India<br />

Radu Ban, the Bill & Melinda<br />

Gates Foundation<br />

09:25 Aligning the actors through<br />

output-based aid<br />

Loan Duong, Thrive Networks<br />

09:35 The effect of OBA subsidies<br />

combined with sanitation<br />

marketing (SanMark)<br />

on latrine uptake among rural<br />

populations in Cambodia<br />

Almud Weitz, The <strong>World</strong> Bank<br />

Group<br />

09:50 Smart subsidies help the rural<br />

poor climb the sanitation<br />

ladder in Vietnam<br />

Per Ljung, East Meets West<br />

10:00 Q&A<br />

10:25 Summary and wrap-up<br />

10:30 Close of event<br />

Turning errors into actions: Continuous improvements!<br />

Convenor: Center for Development and Cooperation at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich,<br />

HELVETAS Swiss Intercooperation, Improve International, International Development Enterprises, Sandec,<br />

Swiss <strong>Water</strong> Partnership and The <strong>Water</strong> Institute at University of North Carolina<br />

How to ensure that monitoring results - successes or failures - are effectively translated into actions and thus ensure continuous improvement?<br />

Following short inputs, a world cafe session will be facilitated around the topics of adaptive planning through innovative funding mechanisms<br />

and organizational and project procedures for continuous quality improvement.<br />

09:00 Setting the scene<br />

Event objectives and <strong>programme</strong><br />

Key building blocks of learning<br />

from errors<br />

09:05 Getting inspired<br />

Charity: water pipeline program:<br />

A funding mechanism set as a<br />

response to low functionality;<br />

the case of Chaldo Rakhaun<br />

(‘Keep it working’) in Nepal<br />

Susan Davis, Improve<br />

International<br />

Continuous Quality<br />

Improvement: Learning from<br />

the automobile industry to<br />

encourage turning monitoring<br />

results into action; Improving<br />

functionality of water systems<br />

and water quality in Ghana<br />

Kaida Liang, UNC<br />

09:20 <strong>World</strong> Café session 1<br />

A facilitated round table<br />

discussion<br />

09:50 <strong>World</strong> Café session 2<br />

10:15 Key outcomes and wrapping up<br />

Presentation of key outcomes<br />

by the table rapporteurs and<br />

concluding messages<br />

10:30 Close of event<br />

Photo: Morgan OMorgan Ommer<br />

for East Meets WestWest<br />

General info Friday<br />

Thursday Wednesday Tuesday Monday<br />

Sunday<br />

<strong>programme</strong>.worldwaterweek.org 105

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