washweb-website/_site/search.json

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"text": "Founder of WASHNote. With over 15 years of experience in the WASH sector, Nick is highly specialized in the development of international and regional monitoring of WASH commitments and their enabling environments, providing country-led monitoring and evaluation of services, and facilitating trainings to a range of different organizations. Above all, he firmly believes in the need for making better use of data and digital systems to advance towards reaching SDG 6: clean water and sanitation for all by 2030.\nEmail | LinkedIn\n\n\n\nMerel works as an independent consultant in the WASH sector. Her work spans a variety of topics, from WASH systems strengthening to disaster preparedness in humanitarian settings. She graduated from the University of Oxford with an MSc in Water Science, Policy and Management, where her dissertation research focused on the use of systems thinking in the implementation of rural water treatment.\nEmail | LinkedIn"
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"title": "Contact",
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"text": "Founder of WASHNote. With over 15 years of experience in the WASH sector, Nick is highly specialized in the development of international and regional monitoring of WASH commitments and their enabling environments, providing country-led monitoring and evaluation of services, and facilitating trainings to a range of different organizations. Above all, he firmly believes in the need for making better use of data and digital systems to advance towards reaching SDG 6: clean water and sanitation for all by 2030.\nEmail | LinkedIn\n\n\n\nMerel works as an independent consultant in the WASH sector. Her work spans a variety of topics, from WASH systems strengthening to disaster preparedness in humanitarian settings. She graduated from the University of Oxford with an MSc in Water Science, Policy and Management, where her dissertation research focused on the use of systems thinking in the implementation of rural water treatment.\nEmail | LinkedIn"
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"title": "Agents of Change",
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"text": "WASH Web is a set of participatory initiatives to give you and everyone you know better access to water, sanitation and hygiene information. This web page is where you can find more information about taking part in various ways.\nThe WASH Web is made up of people and organizations that work to fill the water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) gap to make data discoverable, usable and representative. WASH Web is meant to serve as an open platform and requires diverse inputs to work. Our vision cannot be realized without community support.\nPlease join us to contribute."
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"title": "Agents of Change",
"section": "Social Justice",
"text": "Social Justice\nAccess to safe drinking water is a basic human right, and access to WASH systems is a social justice issue. What information is needed to improve access for marginalized people? What specific ethical issues around data collection, privacy, data ownership, and use of data need to be addressed?"
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"title": "Agents of Change",
"section": "Using Data Better",
"text": "Using Data Better\nThere is a wealth of information and knowledge available regarding WASH data. Organizations like the JMP, GLAAS, World Bank, and OECD have generated valuable data for the sector. How can we make this publicly available data more accessible and more usable? How can we incorporate data that is more difficult to find? How can we involve smaller organizations?"
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"section": "Systems Thinking",
"text": "Systems Thinking\nIn the WASH sector, it is increasingly recognized that systems strengthening is critical to achieve universal services. Understanding and acting on systems requires that qualitative and quantitative information is used holistically in collective action. How do we bring together diverse sources of information to support systems strengthening? What are the benefits and risks of using artificial intelligence and information technology for this task?"
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"title": "Agents of Change",
"section": "Accountability: 4Ws",
"text": "Accountability: 4Ws\nThe actors accountable for water and sanitation decision-making are often dispersed throughout diverse organizations. As a result, there is a scattered and disconnected WASH data ecosystem. It is proposed to make a WASH Registry to offer an overview of who is where, when, and doing what for formal change agents. Can this make the WASH sector more accountable?"
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"title": "Agents of Change",
"section": "Who can take part?",
"text": "Who can take part?\nCitizens, suppliers, NGOs and governments can take part to better use evidence to and to make information accessible.\nAre you interested in one of these initiatives? Please get in touch or add an issue on Github.\nContact form: https://washnote.com/contact/\nAdd an issue: https://github.com/WASHNote/WASHWeb/issues"
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"title": "Welcome",
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"text": "Sitting together and listening to stories is a source of insight. At a young age, my parents work on peace and reconciliation exposed me to thoughtful communicators from different places: Norwegian resistance fighter from WWII who survived against all odds and went on to work on reconciliation himself, Native American leaders and Indian leaders (from India) who processed together with Europeans and white Americans shared colonial legacies, musicians who faced incredible odds and sang about it, and Cambodian educators who survived and outlasted the Khmer Rouge. I also had the opportunity to travel and experience different cultures. Through libraries and books, I continued to travel to new places.\nAs personal computers and then internet took off, my curiosity and computer programming led me to develop early information products like websites and hypercards from the mid to late 1990s. I was excited about the possibility to connect to even more of the world and to learn and share stories. Finally, my studies and work, especially from 2001 onwards, brought my passion for sharing knowledge and experiences to the water, sanitation and hygiene space. However, one thing still strikes me: listening to stories from people with different experiences is how I learn the most. They are a source of my inspiration and help me both frame and validate the information I get from diverse sources.\nWe continue to tell stories with the purpose of improving knowledge in water, sanitation and hygiene. While we tell stories in our sector and produce reports, there is often a barrier between experts who communicate in conferences and users in communities: we use different language, talk in different forums, and have different interests. But by having more exchanges between experts and non-experts these barriers can be overcome. As a result, knowledge can be discovered when it is needed by whom it is needed. Listening, validation and respect are essential so that data and information are owned by those who produce it. With WASH Web, we want participation in a space where this happens. Discussions already taking place can become more accessible.\nBut back to my story: I am remain surprised when I receive a request to work on one more national database or to produce one more programme evaluation or one more national monitoring and evaluation manual. While this has been my bread and butter for a number of years now, I am convinced that focusing more on data for action is less about these artifacts (databases and manuals) and more about the action and vision that produces data and the people who use information. Working to address people going back to open defecation after having a latrine in a community gives the opportunity to identify and collect data that will make a difference, such as understanding the latrine types and quality of latrines households use. It gives us a sense of how these factors impact the ability of people to continue to use latrines. The information is not the source of improvement. The source of improvement is from the vision and will to address a challenge of open defection. Does it require targeted subsidies? Does it require a new sanitation product by a local innovator? How can that be developed? These questions are answered through collective action and collective information sharing. Data alone is not the answer.\nI would like to invite you to take part in a few different discussions with your colleagues, with the people you speak to day to day, and with partners and leaders:\n\nUsing data better: How can we leverage all the activities, surveys, communication and information that is already there without overburdening people?\nSocial justice: How can we improve the representation of the least served in statistics and data? What are the ethical and power dynamics around this data and how do we better manage this?\nSystems thinking: How can we better use qualitative and quantitative information holistically in collective action?\nAccountability: Whos doing what, where, and when? How can this be made more visible to ensure accountability?\n\nWhy a discussion? Because this is how we can link data to people and their stories!\nI am searching for homes to host these discussions for people passionate about the stories that speak to these questions and for the data producers and users who need to link data to action. Are you someone who can facilitate this discussion? Or perhaps you know an existing community of practice such as RWSN or Susana or in a sector leader like IRCWASH or Agenda for Change? Are you interested? Please get in touch!\nNicolas Dickinson\nSome things I have done:\n\nPublishing an open source software package for downloading JMP data for all countries, including inequality country files as a single dataset\nOne of the originating partners of the Water Point Data Exchange (WPdx) and long-time working group member: I first proposed it to be data exchange standard instead of a list of common indicators\nLife-cycle analysis of costs and finance of WASH including the WHO WASH Accounts WAPT and the WASHCost calculator prototype\nCo-founding Knowledge Point Q&A with IRCWASH, WaterAid, and RedR among others: the successor is now hosted by CAWST\nSupporting IRCWASHs online resource library in various ways since 2008\nResearching mobile-enabled technologies from data collection to billing in WASH, including sitting on the GSMA grant panel for a number of years\nThe 12 components participatory assessment methodology for national WASH M&E used to develop costed M&E plans in 8 countries in Western and Central Africa with UNICEF and IRC\nSupporting the establishment of Akvopedia\nFounding WASH Web\n\nFeature photo by McKenna Phillips found on unsplash.com."
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"title": "News",
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"text": "Welcome\n\n\nAn invitation to WASH Web\n\n\n\nNicolas Dickinson\n\n\nSep 26, 2023\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nNo matching items"
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"href": "privacy.html",
"title": "PRIVACY POLICY",
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"text": "When you visit our websites and contact us or create an account on *.washweb.org, *.washnote.org, and *.washnote.com we receive information about you.\nWe also have a commitment to reducing the use of private data to the bare minimum to provide you with these websites and associated services.\nWe do our best to handle your information securely and with respect and care."
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"objectID": "privacy.html#scope",
"href": "privacy.html#scope",
"title": "PRIVACY POLICY",
"section": "Scope",
"text": "Scope\nThis privacy policy applies to all personal data that we process on all domains related to us. This concerns personal data of visitors and users of these websites.\nWe process the personal data of anyone who has visited our website and created an account, filled in data, or contacted us.\nPersonal data is data that can be traced back to you. If you want to know more, please visit the website of the Dutch Data Protection Authority or the EU GDPR website."
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"objectID": "privacy.html#purpose",
"href": "privacy.html#purpose",
"title": "PRIVACY POLICY",
"section": "Purpose",
"text": "Purpose\nWe only use your personal data for the purpose for which we are allowed to use it based on our permission to use your personal data and based on data required to provide you with the service requested.\nWe have a commitment to keep this to the minimum required.\nWe dont share your personal data with others."
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"title": "PRIVACY POLICY",
"section": "WASHNote",
"text": "WASHNote\nWASHNote is responsible for the website (*.washnote.com, *.washnote.org, and *.washweb.org) and therefore the responsible organisation for the use of your personal data as described in this privacy statement. Our full details are:\nWASHNote\nSumatraweg 5A\n3072ZP Rotterdam\n62484885"
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"href": "privacy.html#what-data-how-long-and-where",
"title": "PRIVACY POLICY",
"section": "What data, how long, and where?",
"text": "What data, how long, and where?\nWe may use your name, address or business address, e-mail address, telephone number, and information you provide.\nWe keep your personal data for as long as we are required to do so by law and for as long as you use our services. We only process your personal data ourselves.\nWe process your data within the European Economic Area and we follow the the Dutch General Data Protection Regulation.\nGeneral rules that apply under Dutch law apply to our privacy statement."
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"objectID": "privacy.html#data-protection",
"href": "privacy.html#data-protection",
"title": "PRIVACY POLICY",
"section": "Data protection",
"text": "Data protection\nWe do our best to ensure your data is safe according to the latest standards. We also minimize the amount of data we hold to the bare minimum to ensure we reduce any potential risks."
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"href": "privacy.html#what-are-your-data-protection-rights",
"title": "PRIVACY POLICY",
"section": "What are your data protection rights?",
"text": "What are your data protection rights?\nWe would like to make sure you are fully aware of all of your data protection rights. Every user is entitled to the following:\nThe right to access You have the right to request WASHNote for copies of your personal data. We may charge you a small fee for this service.\nThe right to rectification You have the right to request that WASHNote correct any information you believe is inaccurate. You also have the right to request WASHNote to complete the information you believe is incomplete.\nThe right to erasure You have the right to request that WASHNote erase your personal data, under certain conditions. In some cases, may be required keep some data for 7 years for the Dutch tax authorities.\nThe right to restrict processing You have the right to request that WASHNote restrict the processing of your personal data, under certain conditions.\nThe right to object to processing You have the right to object to WASHNotes processing of your personal data, under certain conditions.\nThe right to data portability You have the right to request that WASHNote transfer the data that we have collected to another organization, or directly to you, under certain conditions.\nIf you make a request, we have one month to respond to you. If you would like to exercise any of these rights, please contact us at our email: dickinson+privacy@washnote.com\nIf you submit multiple applications or a complex request, it could potentially require additional processing time. In such instances, we will make sure to reach out to you within a maximum of 60 days. If necessary, we may also request that you verify your identity by providing specific information to confirm that you are indeed the rightful owner of the personal data in question."
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"href": "privacy.html#cookies",
"title": "PRIVACY POLICY",
"section": "Cookies",
"text": "Cookies\nCookies are text files placed on your computer to collect standard Internet log information and visitor behavior information. When you visit our websites, we may collect information from you automatically through cookies or similar technology\nFor further information, visit allaboutcookies.org.\n\nHow do we use cookies?\nOur Company uses cookies in a range of ways to improve your experience on our website, including:\n\nKeeping you signed in and storing information for your session\n\nWe do not use cookies for advertising or tracking.\n\n\nWhat types of cookies do we use?\nThere are a number of different types of cookies, however, our website uses only:\n\nFunctionality Our Company uses these cookies so that we recognize you on our website and remember your previously selected preferences. These could include what language you prefer and location you are in. A mix of first-party and third-party cookies are used.\n\n\n\nHow to manage cookies\nYou can set your browser not to accept cookies, and the above website tells you how to remove cookies from your browser. However, in a few cases, some of our website features may not function as a result."
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"href": "privacy.html#minors",
"title": "PRIVACY POLICY",
"section": "Minors",
"text": "Minors\nWe do not target minors with our website or as an organisation. This means that if you are under the age of 18, you need permission from a parent or guardian to use our website. If you are a minor when you visit our websites, we assume that you have received this permission before your visit."
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"href": "privacy.html#how-to-contact-us",
"title": "PRIVACY POLICY",
"section": "How to contact us",
"text": "How to contact us\nIf you have a question about our privacy policy, please get in touch: dickinson+privacy@washnote.com."
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"title": "Vision",
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"text": "At the core of the vision, the idea is to make information discoverable, representative, and useful.\n\n\n\n\n\nDiscoverable means that it can not only be found through search and also by simply showing interest in the area and somehow you discover it. Browsing wikipedia articles should be sufficient to find key statistics on water and sanitation. At the moment, these statistics are a few steps away in specialist websites like washdata.org and this information is not automatically used in those articles. Showing interest in a specific district and search “water” and the name of US county should give key facts about water supplies. Data may already be available but simply not discoverable.\nRepresentative means that information should also represent the reality on the ground from different perspectives and that information is not from a single source of truth. It should also be appropriate to the local needs both in terms of the WASH sector and local populations and should be validated.\nUseful information is information from which one can begin to take action. Often key information about who to contact for more information, what happened, when and where is missing. If there is information about water services or sanitation, these are often dated.\nIn short, WASH Web intends to make information and expertise more accessible so that it is no longer only experts who are able to make informed decisions based on available evidence. Up until now, WASH Web has been an idea and a project that a few people have been playing with. This website and the project is open source and participatory meaning it is open to the initiative and inputs from others. Currently, WASHNote hosts and maintains the project website and source code.\nWould you like to get involved? Please get in touch or add an issue on Github.\nThis website was last updated on 2023-10-12 ."
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