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Rural Water Supplies in Developing Countries

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TLDR
In this article, the authors present the elements of a rural water supply program and the difference between rural and urban supplies in such areas as community participation, financing, technical assistance, etc.
Abstract
The best available figures indicate that on a global basis only about 10 per cent of the rural populations have a safe source of water, with the Region of the Americas having the highest coverage at 19 per cent. The program of the Second U.N. Decade proposed to supply coverage to about 200 million persons at an estimated cost of 1.6 billion dollars by 1980. The elements of a rural water supply program are presented, then the difference between rural and urban supplies in such areas as community participation, financing, technical assistance, etc., are discussed. The use of revolving funds to help finance this effort, and the use of the mass approach to help the governments increase their program coverage, are also presented. This paper concludes that while much has been done in the 60's, much remains to be done, but that the basic tools for this effort are available.

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Citations
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Rural water supply and sanitation in less - developed countries : a selected annotated bibliography

TL;DR: In this paper, a bibliography of articles written on the subject of rural water supply and sanitation in less developed countries is presented, according to whether they deal with general topics, technology or health and diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Framework for optimizing chlorine dose in small- to medium-sized water distribution systems: A case of a residential neighbourhood in Lahore, Pakistan

TL;DR: In this article, a model for optimizing the chlorine dose in small-to-medium-sized water distribution systems (SM-WDS) is developed, and the proposed framework has been applied in a case study of a residential neighbourhood in Lahore (Pakistan) with a small network spanning over 0.35 km.

Local Water Network Rectification in Krabi, Thailand

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a table of acknowledgements and acknowledgements for the authorship page of their book, "Acknowledgements and Authorship Page of Authorship".
Journal ArticleDOI

Thai Rural Domestic Water Consumption: A Case Study of a Village Community With No Organized Water Supply System

TL;DR: In this paper, a stepwise regression analysis was applied to assess the variables which were postulated to be associated with per capita rural water consumption and found that household size, average household age, level of education, average income, and number of baths per day were significantly associated with rural domestic water consumption.
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