Martin is an expert in participatory approaches for training, learning and monitoring with over 10 years’ experience working with civil society organisations and local governments. Martin brings to the team six years’ experience in the rural water sector focusing on promotion of sustainable approaches, building coalitions and learning alliances to influence sector wide changes. Martin holds a Master’s degree in Organizational Psychology, a Bachelor of Arts degree with Education and a Post Graduate Certificate in Monitoring and Evaluation, all from Makerere University.
Comparing water utilities in Kenya, Ethiopia, Cambodia, and the United States reveals a gap between the full costs of service delivery and budgets of... Read more...
A 1995 Pacific Institute report, California Water 2020: A Sustainable Vision, offered compelling support for the argument that alternative approaches... Read more...
This paper is based on comparable cross-sectional studies of household environmental problems in three cities with differing proportions of poor... Read more...
Few would dispute that urban water systems should be both healthy and sustainable. Ideally, along with efficiency, these would be central pillars in... Read more...
The Nordic Initiative is a joint contribution by the Nordic countries (Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden) towards the United Nations Conference on... Read more...
During the International Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation Decade, donors and governments wanted to build new water schemes that would serve the... Read more...
More than ever before has the need to provide approximately 1.2 billion people in developing countries with adequate potable water been so urgent. Read more...
This book focuses on the key roles of irrigation and drainage in the debate on water. Irrigation is a major player in the demand for water and... Read more...