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Evidence Use for Improved Sanitation in Ghana

October 2020 Civil society has a long history of supporting service delivery in Ghana through the provision of financial support, conducting research, providing technical advisory support, designing and implementing projects and other initiatives. The sanitation sector has been a particular area of focus for civi…

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Evidence Use for Improved Sanitation in Ghana
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ALL HANDS IN THE
COMMUNITY BOWL
Dede Bedu-Addo
Dede Bedu-Addo, Ghana Monitoring and Evaluation Forum
(GMEF)
Mohammed, Awal
Mohammed Awal, Ghana Center for Democratic Development
(CDD-Ghana)
Centers for Learning on Evaluation and Results
ANGLOPHONE AFRICA

P O L I C Y B R I E F
OCTOBER 2020
EVIDENCE USE FOR IMPROVED SANITATION IN GHANA
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October 2020

Civil society has a long history of supporting service delivery in Ghana through the provision of financial support, conducting research, providing technical advisory support, designing and implementing projects and other initiatives. The sanitation sector has been a particular area of focus for civil society support because of the poor levels of service delivery and, particularly, inequities in sanitation provision in the country. In 2015, the Joint Monitoring Programme (JMP)1 ranked Ghana as the second lowest in the world, with only 15% of the population provided with basic sanitation. These services only reached 1% of the poor, 19% of which practised open defecation (Ntow, 2019; World Health Organisation (WHO) & United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), 2017). With the support of civil society and development partners, there have been improvements in basic sanitation service provision, which moved from 15% in 2015 to an estimated 21% in 2018 (Ghana Statistical Service, 2018).

This policy brief draws on the lessons emerging from a case study that explored the role of civil society in promoting the use of evidence in strengthening the performance of the sanitation sector in Ghana. The case focuses on two initiatives promoted by an NGO, the Ghana Centre for Democratic Development (CDD-Ghana): the I Am Aware (IAA) initiative and the District League Table (DLT).

Report NameEvidence Use for Improved Sanitation in GhanaPartnerCLEAR-AAAuthorDede Bedu-Addo and Mohammed Awal CategoriesEvidence Use, Ghana, Government, Publications Share