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Water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) interventions prevent and control disease in humanitarian response.
Women and girls with disabilities may be excluded from efforts to achieve menstrual health during emergencies.
Today, people worldwide can expect to live into their 60s and beyond.
This paper examines the water–energy–food (WEF) nexus in a humanitarian context, with a specific focus on water, sanitation and hygi
WASH interventions have not always been successful, despite the significant efforts to improve coordination and delivery of quality
This report is based on a desk-based review of secondary data, comprising published material as well as grey literature, supplemente
Global attention on improving the integration of menstrual hygiene management (MHM) into humanitarian response is growing.
Market based programming is increasingly heralded as having a critical place in the future of humanitarian programmi
As an alternative, CLTS can appear fundamentally mismatched with post-emergency and fragile states contexts: the core
The aims of this study are to identify sanitation options for infants and young children less than five years old (IYCU5) in emergen