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Add to basketHardcover. Condition: New. ISBN:9788131611890,532pp.
Published by Rawat Publications
ISBN 10: 8131611892 ISBN 13: 9788131611890
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Published by Rawat Publications
ISBN 10: 8131611892 ISBN 13: 9788131611890
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Published by Rawat Publications
ISBN 10: 8131611892 ISBN 13: 9788131611890
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Published by Rawat Publications, 2022
ISBN 10: 8131611892 ISBN 13: 9788131611890
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Add to basketHardcover. Condition: New. Contents: 1. Introduction. 2. Understanding Sanitation. 3. Global Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Initiatives. 4. Participatory Sanitation Approaches. 5. Toilet: Genesis, History and Typology. 6. Manual Scavenging in India. 7. Sanitation in India: Issues, Policies and Programmes. 8. Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM) 2014. 9. Sulabh Sanitation and Social Reform. 10. Mahatma Gandhi and Dr Bindeshwar Pathak: Common Goals and Divergent Means. A truly interdisciplinary book, covering sanitation issues across all involved disciplines, it examines the sanitation in the context of a multiplicity of socio-cultural values and law and policy framework in India. The term sanitation , used in this book refers specifically to the safe excreta disposal and thus is uncoupled from water supply or disposal of household trash/ garbage. India, home to a billion, faces a huge challenge in the field of sanitation. The reasons are not far to look for; rampant and indiscriminate open defecation and lack of adequate toilet facilities are responsible for such dismissal scenario. The book underlines sanitation and its myriad intersections with caste, class and gender in Indian socio-cultural context and presents a critical description of the State interventions in the field of sanitation, particularly through sanitation policies and Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM). It engages with the Sulabh, a non-profit voluntary social organisation founded in 1970 by Dr Bindeshwar Pathak and its role played in the provision of appropriate sanitation facilities primarily through its two-pit toilet technology. Uniquely specific to the Indian socio-cultural milieu is the dehumanising and degrading practice of manual scavenging intricately tied to the sanitation. The book provides a critical overview of various initiatives taken by both the State and Sulabh International with respect to abolishing manual scavenging. The book not only makes stimulating and wide-ranging reading to the emerging discipline of Sociology of Sanitation in India but is also useful for those engaged in Development Studies, Policy Studies and Social Work.