Understanding open defecation in rural India untouchability, pollution, and latrine pits
Article Type
Research Article
Publication Title
Economic and Political Weekly
Abstract
India has far higher open defecation rates than other developing regions where people are poorer, literacy rates are lower, and water is relatively more scarce. In practice, government programmes in rural India have paid little attention in understanding why so many rural Indians defecate in the open rather than use affordable pit latrines. Drawing on new data, a study points out that widespread open defecation in rural India is on account of beliefs, values, and norms about purity, pollution, caste, and untouchability that cause people to reject affordable latrines. Future rural sanitation programmes must address villagers' ideas about pollution, pit-emptying, and untouchability, and should do so in ways that accelerate progress towards social equality for Dalits rather than delay it.
First Page
59
Last Page
66
Publication Date
1-7-2017
Recommended Citation
Coffey, Diane; Gupta, Aashish; Hathi, Payal; Spears, Dean; Srivastav, Nikhil; and Vyas, Sangita, "Understanding open defecation in rural India untouchability, pollution, and latrine pits" (2017). Journal Articles. 2724.
https://digitalcommons.isical.ac.in/journal-articles/2724