Posts filed under ‘Monitoring & Evaluation’
3rd Ghana Water Forum, [venue to be confirmed], 6-8 September 2011
Theme: Water and Sanitation Services Delivery in a Rapidly Changing Urban Environment
The Ghana Water Forum is an annual water & sanitation sector review and learning event for all sector stakeholders.
Topics:
- Achieving the Water and Sanitation MDGs
- Rapid Urbanization and the lag in service delivery
- Development and Management of Urban Water Resources
- Dealing with Long term uncertainties and Global Change Pressures
- Sanitation and Wastewater Use
- Economic Regulation and Innovative Financing
- Governance, Policy and Management
- Knowledge and Capacity Development
- Service Delivery Approach
- Monitoring and Evaluation
- Rural-Urban Interface and Challenges
Side events:
- Ministerial and Development Partners Roundtable
- Business Roundtable
- Youth and Children’s Forum
- Exhibition
Deadline for submission of papers: 04 July 2011
Deadline for submission of PowerPoint presentations: 18 August 2011
For more information and registration details go to the Ghana Water Forum web site
Water and Health: Where Science Meets Policy, Chapel Hill, NC, USA, 23-26 October 2010
Organised by: Water Institute and Institute for the Environment at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
This conference will bring together individuals and experts from academia, industry, NGOs, government and foundations to provide an inter-disciplinary perspective spanning science, policy, practice, financing and economics on drinking water sanitation, hygiene and water resources with a strong public health emphasis. The conference will deal with critical concerns relevant to both the developing and developed worlds.
The UN-Water Global Annual Assessment of Sanitation and Drinking-Water (GLAAS) will be presented at the conference. “This will be the first public event at which such discussion is encouraged and organized and provides a means to both present the report to an expert audience and to secure feedback and comment on it.”
Keynote Speakers
- John Borrazzo, Chief, Maternal and Child Health (MCH) Division, Bureau for Global Health U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
- Clarissa Brocklehurst, Chief of Water and Environmental Sanitation, UNICEF
- Jeni Colbourne, Chief Drinking Water Inspector, UK Drinking Water Inspectorate
- Peter Kolsky, Senior Water and Sanitation Specialist, World Bank
- Upmanu Lall, Director, Columbia Water Center; Alan and Carol Silberstein Professor of Earth and Environmental Engineering and Civil Engineering and Engineering Mechanics at Columbia University
Besides the main conference on 25-26 October, there will be weekend networking and learning sessions on 23-23 October.
Main Conference Themes:
- What works in water and health?
- Financing for water and development
- New challenges and climate change
- Innovations and emerging trends
- Monitoring and Evaluation
- Health systems and WaSH
- Impact and sustainability
- Frontiers of regulation
- Small systems
- Beaches and coastal areas
- Household water treatment and hygiene behaviors
- Water scarcity, reuse
Networking Weekend Events:
- Household Water Treatment and Safe Storage – Convening of the International Network
- Health Impact Assessment – Principles and Practice
- WaSH and Health Systems
- Water Quality and Health
- Water Safety Plans – Identifying Future Research Priorities
- Hygienic Risks of Sanitation Systems
- Microfinancing for Water, Sanitation, Hygiene & Environmental Projects
- Molecular Methods for Characterizing and Measuring Recreational Water Quality
- Meeting of the Universities Consortium for Global Water, Sanitation and Hygiene
Conference web site: www.ie.unc.edu/content/news_events/symposia/2010/index.cfm
Access and Behavioral Outcome Indicators for WASH Programming, Webinar, 02 March 2010 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM EST (USA)
An online discussion, led by monitoring and evaluation specialist Orlando Hernandez, about a new publication from the USAID Hygiene Improvement Project, “Access and Behavioral Outcome Indicators for Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene,” and how to apply these indicators to WASH programming.
Register here

