Contributing Actions to the United Nations System-wide Strategy for Water and Sanitation
Contributing Actions to the United Nations System-wide Strategy for Water and Sanitation
UN-Water Members and Partners’ activities are categorised as Contributing Actions towards the United Nations System-wide Strategy for Water and Sanitation. These actions are integrated into the Collaborative Implementation Plan (CIP) Results Framework 2025-2028. In this section, you can discover who does what.
UNDRR makes available appropriate and applicable knowledge, providing policy guidance and tools to countries to support their efforts to reduce disaster risk, contributing to water-related...
Working with WHO on JMP and GLAAS, align and accelerate initiative, as well as other initiatives relating to healthcare facilities and safely managed sanitation and...
Support WHO on the post 2030 Discussion paper and provide technical inputs on improving the monitoring of the means of WASH outputs and implementation for...
WHO and UNICEF, through GLAAS and the JMP, are leading work to identify indicators to monitor climate resilient WASH and to incorporate those indicators into...
The Water at the Heart of Climate Action project is an EW4All aligned project to support 5 countries in the Nile River basin to understand...
UNDRR provides normative support through the Words into Action (WiA), which are thematic guides for the implementation of the Sendai Framework and the integration of...
The Global Platform and the Regional Platforms for Disaster Risk Reduction are the main forums at global and regional level for knowledge and practice sharing...
Data from JMP and GLAAS on inequalities and the integration of the human rights to water and sanitation. Technical assistance to countries on collecting these...
As dedicated Global WASH Cluster lead for humanitarian coordination and, in many occasions, co-chair of national coordination functions in ~ 100 counties that UNICEF work...
With a growing impact of the climate emergency, water-related disasters are only expected to increase in their frequency, impact and magnitude. This necessitates a significant...