Projects per year
Abstract
With less than half of the world's urban population having safely managed sanitation due to the high cost and difficulty of building sewers and treatment plants, many rely on off-grid options like pit latrines and septic tanks, which are hard to empty and often lead to illegal waste dumping; this research focuses on container-based sanitation (CBS) as an emerging off-grid solution. Off-grid sanitation refers to waste management systems that operate independently of centralized infrastructure and CBS is a service providing toilets that collect human waste in sealable containers, which are regularly emptied and safely disposed of. These data relate to a project investigating CBS in Kenya, Peru, and South Africa, focusing on how different user groups access and utilize sanitation – contrasting CBS with other types. Participants, acting as citizen scientists, collected confidential data through a dedicated smartphone app designed by the authors and external contractors. This project aimed to explore the effective scaling, management, and regulation of off-grid sanitation systems, relevant to academics in urban planning, water and sanitation services, institutional capability, policy and governance, and those addressing inequality and poverty reduction.
The 12-month data collection period offered participants small incentives for weekly engagement, in a micro payment for micro tasks approach. Participants were randomly selected, attended a training workshop, and (where needed) were given a smartphone which they could keep at the end of the project. We conducted weekly smartphone surveys in over 300 households across informal settlements. These surveys aimed to understand human-environment interactions by capturing daily life, wellbeing, income, infrastructural service use, and socioeconomic variables at a weekly resolution, contributing to more informed analyses and decision-making.
The smartphone-based approach offers efficient, cost-effective, and flexible data collection, enabling extensive geographical coverage, broad subject areas, and frequent engagement. The Open Data Kit (ODK) tools were used to support data collection in the resource-constrained environment with limited or intermittent connectivity.
The 12-month data collection period offered participants small incentives for weekly engagement, in a micro payment for micro tasks approach. Participants were randomly selected, attended a training workshop, and (where needed) were given a smartphone which they could keep at the end of the project. We conducted weekly smartphone surveys in over 300 households across informal settlements. These surveys aimed to understand human-environment interactions by capturing daily life, wellbeing, income, infrastructural service use, and socioeconomic variables at a weekly resolution, contributing to more informed analyses and decision-making.
The smartphone-based approach offers efficient, cost-effective, and flexible data collection, enabling extensive geographical coverage, broad subject areas, and frequent engagement. The Open Data Kit (ODK) tools were used to support data collection in the resource-constrained environment with limited or intermittent connectivity.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 110635 |
Journal | Data in Brief |
Volume | 55 |
Early online date | 13 Jun 2024 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Aug 2024 |
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Dive into the research topics of 'Comparative sanitation data from high-frequency phone surveys across 3 countries'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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Rethinking the off-grid city: Human-infrastructure interactions in the context of urban crises and urban change
Barrington, D. (Investigator 01)
Economic and Social Research Council ESRC
1/07/20 → 30/09/24
Project: Research
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How legible is sanitation in slums? Lessons from a multi-country longitudinal study
Parker, A., Casas, A., Hutchings, P., Bell, A., Kupiec-Teahan, B., Lewis, A., Mendoza Sanchez, J., Willcock, S., Anciano, F., Barrington, D., Dube, M., Karani, C., Llaxacondor, A., Lopez, H., Mdee, A., Ofori, A., Riungu, J., Russel, K. & Kristensen, B., 14 Oct 2024.Research output: Contribution to conference › Conference presentation/ephemera › peer-review
Open Access -
Lived experiences of container-based sanitation in Kenya, South Africa and Peru
Barrington, D., Chumo, I., Karani, C., Riungu, J., Florian, N., Lopez, H., Anciano, F., Dube, M., Mabaso, L., Ofori, A. & Parker, A., 16 Oct 2024.Research output: Contribution to conference › Conference presentation/ephemera › peer-review
Open Access -
On a journey to city-wide inclusive sanitation? A political economy analysis of container-based sanitation (CBS) in the fragmented in(formal) city
Mdee, A., Ofori, A., Barrington, D., Anciano, F., Dube, M., Hutchings, P., Kramer, S., López-Valladares, H., Parker, A., Riungu, J. & Ward, C., 18 Dec 2024, (E-pub ahead of print) In: Globalizations. 21 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access1 Citation (Web of Science)