Cleveland State University, OH.
Dev Change. 2011;42(5):1153-178. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-7660.2011.01730.x.
The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) is generally considered to be making adequate progress towards meeting Target 10 of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which calls for halving the proportion of the population with inadequate access to drinking water and sanitation. Progress towards achieving Target 10 is evaluated by the Joint Monitoring Programme (JMP), run by UNICEF and WHO. This article shows that the assessment methodologies employed by the JMP significantly overstate coverage rates in the drinking water and sanitation sectors, by overlooking and ‘not counting’ problems of access, affordability, quality of service and pollution. The authors show that states in MENA often fail to provide safe drinking water and adequate sanitation services, particularly in densely populated informal settlements, and that many centralized water and sanitation infrastructures contribute to water pollution and contamination. Despite the glaring gap between the MDG statistics and the evidence available from national and local reports, exclusionary political regimes in the region have had few incentives to adopt more accurate assessments and improve the quality of service. While international organizations have proposed some reforms, they too lack incentives to employ adequate measures that gauge access, quality and affordability of drinking water and sanitation services.
中东和北非(MENA)地区通常被认为在实现千年发展目标(MDGs)目标 10 方面取得了足够的进展,该目标呼吁将无法获得适当饮用水和卫生设施的人口比例减半。实现目标 10 的进展情况由儿基会和世卫组织联合运行的联合监测方案(JMP)进行评估。本文表明,JMP 采用的评估方法严重夸大了饮用水和卫生部门的覆盖范围,忽视了获取、负担能力、服务质量和污染等问题,并且“不计数”。作者指出,MENA 国家往往无法提供安全饮用水和充足的卫生服务,特别是在人口密集的非正规住区,许多集中式水和卫生基础设施导致水污染和污染。尽管 MDG 统计数据与国家和地方报告提供的证据之间存在明显差距,但该地区的排他性政治制度几乎没有动力进行更准确的评估和提高服务质量。尽管国际组织提出了一些改革建议,但它们也缺乏激励措施来采取适当的措施来衡量饮用水和卫生服务的获取、质量和负担能力。