By MASEMBE TAMBWE recently in Darbhanga, Bihar State
STUDENTS from all corners of the globe including Tanzania who want to solve the sanitation problems
of the day will now have better opportunities to do so thanks to the
acceptance of the sociology of sanitation as a sub-discipline of sociology by a number of Indian tertiary
institutions.
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More employment opportunities for the youth |
In recent years, the importance of sanitation in countries like Tanzania
has been more pronounced where in 2012, the Ministry of Health and Social
Welfare started implementing a pilot project in three districts of Dodoma with
funding from the Global Sanitation Fund as well as launching a national
campaign
Renowned international sanitation guru and the propagator
of the teaching of the sociology of sanitation, Dr Bindeshwar Pathak told Wash Fair that already a university in Bhavnagar in Gujarat has introduced
this subject as a part of sociology course at graduate level and others are
sure to follow.
“When I started advocating for the inclusion of this
subject into sociology in 1985, back then I received a lot of resistance from
experts saying that first it was impossible to teach it and later that was no curriculum and
manuals, these hurdles have now been overcome,” he explained.
The sociology of sanitation is a scientific study to
solve society's problems in relation to sanitation, social deprivation, water,
public health, hygiene, ecology, environment, poverty, gender equality, welfare
of children and empowering people for sustainable development.
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Dr Bindeshwar Pathak (center) traditionally being received by his host, the L.N. Mithila University Vice Chancellor, Prof Saket Kushwaha and his wife at their home in Darbhanga district, Bihar State |
Dr Pathak said that 30 years down the road, seven
teaching manuals have been published and several others are in their final
stages of publication. He said that the inclusion of the subject means that more
employment opportunities will be made to those who choose to take up the
subject.
Sinha Institute of Social Studies in Patna, Bihar State
in India specialist in political and rural sociology, Prof Nil Ratan who
contributed to the writing of the manuals said that the subject will have 100 marks out of 600
and will have five units on the introduction, relation between social institute
and sanitation, environment and sanitation, society and sanitation and on the Sulabh
movement in India.
“The Sulabh movement in India has been added because of
the immense achievements that this NGO has made to India but also it is
something that other nations with similar sanitation challenges can emulate.
The two pit latrine technology is not patented and can be adopted in these
places,” he explained.
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Maharaja Kameshwar Singh Palace Darbhangan |
During a recent workshop held in Darbhanga district of
Bihar State at the L N Mithila University, the Vice chancellor Prof Saket
Kushwaha said the university is taking steps to include sanitation as a subject
in the next academic session.
In 2013 a national conference on sociology of sanitation was
organised in Delhi where sociologists from around the country proposed that the
new sub-discipline should be implemented at the theoretical, empirical and
action level.
The conference recommended that the primary objective of
the discipline was to achieve total elimination of open defecation (easing
oneself in the open and not in toilets) and empowering of disadvantaged
communities.
The Secretary of the Ministry of Drinking Water and
Sanitation, Mr Pankaj Jain said during the closing of the conference that NGOs
of the calibre of Sulabh International were needed to be in the forefront of
promotion of sanitation.
Mr Jain said that it gravely saddened him that India was
rapidly inching towards becoming a superpower with the highest levels of
technological advancements, some of the best doctors yet it accounted for over
60 per cent of the global population that defecate in the open.