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Human Rights and Water Integrity in Informal Settlements

RESEARCH FROM SOUTH AFRICA AND KENYA STRESSES NEED FOR ACTION TO DELIVER ADEQUATE WATER AND SANITATION IN URBAN SLUMS


Research

Published in 2020 with SERI

By Virginia Roaf, Alana Potter, Irene Ngunjiri, and Barbara Schreiner

Suggested citation: Roaf, V; Potter, A; Ngunjiri, I; Schreiner, B (2020), Human Rights and Water Integrity: Implications for Informal Settlements Water and Sanitation. SERI and Water Integrity Network


 

Despite clear international law on the human rights to water and sanitation, and widespread recognition of these rights, people living in informal settlements (slums) typically lack access to essential services. They pay more per litre for precarious, potentially unsafe water than residents in wealthier areas, and have limited access to toilets; relying on shared latrines, self-dug pits or overflowing chemical latrines.

Lack of integrity and corruption contribute to the failure to deliver services, reinforcing existing inequalities in access to water and sanitation, diverting resources from where they are most needed, and reducing the quality and availability of services.


Water tap in Marikana, South Africa - photo by SERI

A new paper from the Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa (SERI) and the international Water Integrity Network (WIN) discusses these issues based on research conducted by SERI in Siyanda, Marikana and Ratanang, three informal settlements in South Africa, and by partners in Mukuru, an informal settlement in Nairobi, Kenya.

The paper shows how an integrity focus can help to achieve human rights obligations and how a human rights focus improves integrity and reduces opportunities for corruption.


 
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