| Water Wisdom: Developing Local-Global Capacities in Managing Water |
 Water pump in Bangladesh The University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill has developed a program to engage postdoctoral investigators in
interdisciplinary research to address information and decision making related
to local, national and international water and sanitation (WatSan) programs. With funding from the Fogarty International Center (NIH), this work builds capacity among postdoctoral
researchers, creates interdisciplinary
partnerships, and establishes a foundation
for problem-based research.
Four connected research activities
will address the following problem:
The systems in place to create, collect,
consolidate, and transmit information to those who contribute to WatSan service
provision are inadequate, resulting in failed physical and institutional
systems, unmet policy goals, insufficient adoption and application of proven
good practices, and a lack of a clear direction forward.
These failures mean that millions of people,
primarily children, die or suffer from preventable causes each year because of
a lack of adequate WatSan services. This research takes the first steps in
formulating a comprehensive understanding of how information is used by policy
makers and practitioners in WatSan and will suggest opportunities where application
of developments in information technology (IT) could lead to more effective and
robust systems in both developing and developed nations.
This research collaboration will involve
units at UNC in the Gillings School of Global Public Health (Environmental
Sciences and Engineering, Office of Global Health, Water Institute), the
Kenan-Flagler Business School, and the College of Arts and Sciences (Department
of Public Policy), as well as the Renaissance Computing Initiative (RENCI) and
the Department of Civil Engineering at the University of Cape Town in South
Africa. The Office of Global Health will administer the program.
The aims of the
program will:
-
Create a team of
postdoctoral researchers to address decision making, organizational behavior
and information technology in water and sanitation.
-
Create research
capacity for interdisciplinary postdoctoral researchers at UNC in global public
health.
The conclusions of this research will establish new approaches for designing
systems (institutional and technological) to provide accurate and timely
information in the appropriate format to support improved WatSan policy making
and program implementation.
The potential impact of the products of Water
Wisdom is high. Policies and programs that are better informed by timely and
objective evidence can result in dramatic improvement in the lives of millions
of people currently unserved by adequate water or sanitation systems. Even a
small impact on policy making has the potential for substantive global public
health gains.
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Last updated October 07, 2011 |