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Efforts to provide rural infrastructure and sanitation facilities can be opportunities for gender mainstreaming.
Statisticians turn to digital solutions and nontraditional methods for faster data collection, processing, and dissemination to inform crisis response.
A context-sensitive approach in Myanmar is helping to avoid negative impacts and maximize positive results of development projects and programs.
Investments include water conservation, ecosystem rehabilitation, disaster prevention, and green growth capacity development.
Improving access to water and sanitation requires not just investing in infrastructure but also policies that ensure the sustainability of services.
Tajikistan has overcome the challenges of being a mountainous, landlocked country to make development gains across society.
In Indonesia, a university in Lampung is building an SDGs monitoring dashboard to improve data management and visualization for local governments.
In South Asia, stakeholders worked together to enhance integrated water resources management in mountainous river basins prone to precipitation extremes.
Digital financial services like mobile money can reduce transfer prices and improve transparency, efficiency, and access.
In the Philippines, a pilot project to rehabilitate the Pasig River built community support around a low-cost waste management system.