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Notes and References

From political commitments on transboundary water cooperation to

on-ground actions in Southern Africa

1 UNESCO-WWAP (2006) Water: a shared responsibility. The United Nations

World Water Development Report 2.

2 McCracken, M. (2016) Measuring transboundary water cooperation: options for

Sustainable Development Goal Target 6.5. Global Water Partnership Technical

Committee (TEC) Background Paper Nº 23.

3 Ibid 1.

4 Jagerskog, A. (2013) Transboundary water management – why it is important

and why it needs to be developed. In Free Flow: Reaching water security

through cooperation. UNESCO, Paris.

5 UNEP-DHI and UNEP (2016) Transboundary River Basins: Status and Trends.

United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Nairobi.

6 IGRAC and UNESCO-IHP (2015) Transboundary Aquifers of the World [map].

Edition 2015. Scale 1 : 50 000 000. IGRAC, Delft.

7 Ibid 5.

8 Ibid 4.

Framing sustainable water resource management from the vantage point of

climate-resilient infrastructure and a green economy

1 Ashton, P.J. Avoiding conflicts over Africa’s water resources. Journal of the

Human Environment 31(3):236-242, 2002.

https://doi.org/10.1579/0044-

7447-31.3.236

2 ICA, 2016. Infrastructure Financing Trends in Africa, 2015. Abidjan

https://www.icafrica.org/fileadmin/documents/Annual_Reports/ICA_2015_

annual_report.pdf

3 UNECA, AfDB, AUC. 2000. The Africa Water Vision for 2025: Equitable and

Sustainable Use of Water for Socioeconomic Development

(https://www.afdb

.

org/fileadmin/uploads/afdb/Documents/Generic-Documents/african%20

water%20vision%202025%20to%20be%20sent%20to%20wwf5.pdf

4 World Bank, Economic Commission for Africa. 2015. Enhancing the Climate

Resilience of Africa’s Infrastructure (ECRAI): The Power and Water Sectors.

Washington D.C.

https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/21875

5 World Bank, Economic Commission for Africa. 2015. Enhancing the Climate

Resilience of Africa’s Infrastructure: The Roads and Bridges Sector. Washington

D.C.

http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/270671478809724744/

pdf/110137-WP-PUBLIC-ECRAI-Transport-CLEAN-WEB.pdf

Water and sanitation for all – bridging SDG 6 with other SDGs for sustainable

development

1 Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the United Nations Development Program

(UNDP)

2 See UNEP 2015:

https://wedocs.unep.org/bitstream/

handle/20.500.11822/9844/-Blue_economy_sharing_success_stories_

to_inspire_change-2015blue_economy_sharing_success_stories.pdf.

pdf?sequence=3&isAllowed=y

New approaches to irrigation – measuring water use productivity using

remote sensing

1 Asian Development Bank, 2016. Asian Water Development Outlook 2016.

2 FAO, 2009. How to Feed the World 2050.

3 From Turning up the Heat for a Climate Deal

http://www.dhakatribune.com/feature/2015/nov/21/turning-heat-climate-deal

4 Asian Water Development Outlook 2016, Asian Development Bank.

5 Target 6.4 aims to substantially increase water-use efficiency across all sectors

and ensure sustainable withdrawals and supply of freshwater to address water

scarcity and substantially reduce the number of people suffering from water

scarcity by 2030.

6 International Conflict Over Water Resources in Himalayan Asia, Robert G.

Wirsing, Christopher Jasparro, Daniel C. Stoll, 2016.

Mobilising community-led water supply, sanitation and hygiene improvements

in Fijian villages

1 See:

www.niwa.co.nz/korosan

Strategic collaboration, networking, awareness and succession planning for

capacity building towards water security in Malaysia

1 Brundtland G.H., 1987.

2 National Transformation 2050 (TN50)

https://www.nst.com.my/news/2017/01/206524/msias-education-blueprint-line-

tn50-education-minister-tells-students-london

3 Department of Irrigation and Drainage, Malaysia (DID), (2015). Final Report

Study on Performance of Gross Pollutant Trapping Devices Vs. Life Cycle Cost

and Gross Pollutant Management Strategies Knowledge Database. Case Study:

River of Life.

The SuSanA platform and the Shit Flow Diagram – tools to achieve more

sustainable sanitation for all

1 SuSanA (2017). Contribution of sustainable sanitation to the Agenda 2030

for sustainable development - SuSanA Vision Document 2017. Sustainable

Sanitation Alliance (SuSanA) secretariat, Eschborn, Germany.

2 SuSanA (2017). Sustainable sanitation and the SDGs: Interlinkages and

opportunities. Sustainable Sanitation Alliance (SuSanA) secretariat, Eschborn,

Germany.

3 Rohilla, S. K., Luthra, B., Varma, R. S., Padhi S. K. (2016). SFD Report -

Tiruchirappalli, India - SFD Promotion Initiative. Centre for Science and

Environment (CSE), New Delhi, India.

4 Furlong, C. (2016). SFD Report - Dhaka, Bangladesh - SFD Promotion Initiative.

Water, Engineering and Development Centre (WEDC), Leicestershire, UK.

5 Hassib, Y., Roeder, L. (2015). SFD Report - Moshi, Tanzania - SFD Promotion

Initiative. Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ)

GmbH, Eschborn, Germany.

6 Scott, P., Cotton, A., & Sohail, M. (2015). Using tenure to build a “sanitation

cityscape”: Narrowing decisions for targeted sanitation interventions.

Environment and Urbanization, 27(2), pp.389-406.

7 Peal, A., Evans, B. E., Blackett, I., Hawkins, P., & Heymans, C. (2014). Fecal

sludge management (FSM): Analytical tools for assessing FSM in cities. Journal

of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development, 4(3), 371-383. doi:10.2166/

washdev.2014.139

8 Peal, A., Evans, B. E., Blackett, I., Hawkins, P., & Heymans, C. (2014). Fecal

sludge management: A comparative assessment of 12 cities. Journal of Water,

Sanitation and Hygiene for Development, 4(4), 563-575. doi:10.2166/

washdev.2014.026

9 Down to Earth Magazine (2016). Pipe Dream. Down to Earth Magazine,

December 16, New Delhi, India.

10 Down to Earth Magazine (2016). Dirty Tricks. Down to Earth Magazine, April

15, New Delhi, India.

11 MoUD (2016). Primer on faecal sludge & septage management. Ministry of

Urban Development, New Delhi, Government of India.

12 Ohler, S. (2017). SuSanA 10th Anniversary Report. Sustainable Sanitation

Alliance (SuSanA) secretariat, Eschborn, Germany.

13 Tilley, E., Lüthi, C., Morel, A., Zurbrügg, C., & Schertenleib, R. (2008).

Compendium of Sanitation Systems and Technologies. Swiss Federal Institute of

Aquatic Science and Technology (Eawag), Dübendorf, Switzerland.

14 Esrey, S.A., Andersson, I., Hillers, A., & Sawyer, R. (2001). Closing the loop.

Ecological sanitation for food security. SIDA, Stockholm, Sweden.

15 GTZ & IWA (2003). Ecosan - closing the loop - Proceedings of the 2nd

international symposium, 7th –11th April 2003, Lübeck, Germany. Deutsche

Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) GmbH and International

Water Association (IWA).

16 Lange, J., & Otterpohl, R. (1996). Abwasser-Handbuch zu einer zukunftsfähigen

Wasserwirtschaft. First edition, Mallbeton Verlag, Donaueschingen, Germany.

17 UNESCO/IHP & GTZ (2006). Capacity Building for Ecological Sanitation

- Concepts for ecologically sustainable sanitation in formal and continuing

education. International Hydrological Programme (IHP) of the United Nations

and Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) GmbH,

Eschborn, Germany.

18 Shaeffer, J.R., & Stevens, L.A. (1983). Future Water. William Morrow and Co.,

New York, USA.

19 BMZ (2017). BMZ Water Strategy. A key contribution to implementing the 2030

Agenda and the Paris Agreement. Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation

and Development (BMZ), Bonn, Germany.

20 Walther D., & Yadav, J. (2014). Waste to energy project co-fermentation of

organic waste and septage for energy production in Nashik - factsheet. Deutsche

Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH. Accessible online:

http://www.urbansanitation.org/e31169/e58117/

21 Roeder, L. (2016). SFD Report - Kochi, India - SFD Promotion Initiative.

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH.