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Navigating the path: regulatory readiness and stakeholder insights in Indonesia's citywide inclusive sanitation landscape
Navigating the path: regulatory readiness and stakeholder insights in Indonesia's citywide inclusive sanitation landscape
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Navigating the path: regulatory readiness and stakeholder insights in Indonesia's citywide inclusive sanitation landscape
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Navigating the path: regulatory readiness and stakeholder insights in Indonesia's citywide inclusive sanitation landscape
Navigating the path: regulatory readiness and stakeholder insights in Indonesia's citywide inclusive sanitation landscape

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Navigating the path: regulatory readiness and stakeholder insights in Indonesia's citywide inclusive sanitation landscape
Navigating the path: regulatory readiness and stakeholder insights in Indonesia's citywide inclusive sanitation landscape
Journal Article

Navigating the path: regulatory readiness and stakeholder insights in Indonesia's citywide inclusive sanitation landscape

2024
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Overview
Inadequate sanitation has catastrophic consequences for public health, standard of living, and productivity, as well as gender equality and social inclusion. Urban sanitation programmes yield suboptimal outcomes regarding long-term impact, effectiveness, sustainability, and fairness. To ensure that all urban dwellers in Low- to Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) have access to sanitation facilities that are properly maintained and safe, it is crucial to bring about a fundamental change in the urban sanitation sector through the implementation of Citywide Inclusive Sanitation (CWIS). This research analyses the sanitation regulatory framework and stakeholders' perspectives in Bandung City, Indonesia. The goal is to determine the possible obstacles and advantages of implementing a comprehensive CWIS (Citywide Inclusive Sanitation) system in Indonesia. The CWIS idea has been recognised at the national level in Indonesia. While existing legislation and policies partially govern and deal with CWIS components, there is no official programme establishment yet and limited implementation at the local level. Some challenges that have been identified include conflicting priorities in serving marginalised populations, a lack of political commitment and capacity to provide comprehensive services for all types of domestic wastewater (including grey water) and throughout the entire sanitation service chain (from containment to treatment and/or reuse and recovery), inadequate knowledge management and data transparency, a lack of incentives and penalties for local governments to meet sanitation standards, and limited motivation for meaningful and institutionalised private sector involvement. This study also delineates four crucial domains for efficiently fostering the deployment of CWIS in Indonesia.