We are currently updating our website. During this time, some features or pages may be temporarily unavailable. We apologise for any inconvenience and appreciate your patience.

Access to Water and Sanitation

PERU, Lima

Human Settlements in Lima: Corruption, Integrity and Access to Water and Sanitation

PERU, Lima

Water Integrity Network (WIN), Berlin, Germany; Center for Research in Urban and Territorial Theory (UrbesLab), and Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú (INCITU-PUCP), Lima, Peru

Corruption, integrity failures, lack of accountability, and poor access to water and sanitation services are strongly connected. Vulnerable groups, particularly those living in informal settlements are the ones that suffer the consequences of corruption and lack of integrity the most. In Lima, Peru, informal settlements have been historically excluded from formal water and sanitation supply because of being unprofitable or because their land tenure status and housing rights are not recognised. As a result, residents are often forced to spend large amounts of time and money to obtain water, and often suffer deep indignities due to unhygienic and unsafe conditions. Rising levels of socio-spatial inequalities have major consequences for the sustainability of the city and strongly influence who has access to water and sanitation, of what quality, which amount and at which price, and intersect with factors such as gender, race, class, disability, caste, and age.

The participants of this MOOC will hear directly from policy makers, civil society organizations, residents of informal settlements and staff of the utility company regarding different efforts to reduce corruption and improve integrity, and how strengthening integrity can help to create cities that are transparent, accountable, and equitable.

This MOOC is structured around three different spatial scales: city scale, neighbourhood scale, and household scale. Through short videos, interviews, iconographies, cartographic material and key readings, participants will expand their understanding of the impacts of corruption and lack of integrity in the water and sanitation sectors, how to address such challenges, and how such impacts can be spatialized in informal settlements.

SDG  Targets:

   


MOOC Open Access

Hosting platform: Cap-Net
Access the course in Spanish here

For the videos with English subtitles, watch the Playlist or a single lecture:

  • Chapter 1.1: The Human Rights to Water and Sanitation in Peru
  • Chapter 1.2: The Cost and Impacts of Corruption on Water and Sanitation Services in Peru
  • Chapter 1.3: Why Integrity Matters in Achieving the Human Rights to Water and Sanitation in Peru
  • Chapter 2.1: Urban settlements in Lima: Land, Migration, and Water and Sanitation Services
  • Chapter 2.2: Water and Sanitation Services in the City of Lima: The Case of SEDAPAL
  • Chapter 2.3: The Challenges of Reducing Water Inequalities in Lima
  • Chapter 3.1: Water Access in Lima’s Largest District: San Juan de Lurigancho
  • Chapter 3.2: Supplying Water in San Juan de Lurigancho: Public Fountains
  • Chapter 3.3: Supplying Water in San Juan de Lurigancho: Tanker Trucks
  • Chapter 4.1: Everyday Struggles: Accessing Water via Public Fountains in Lima
  • Chapter 4.2: Everyday Struggles: Accessing Water via Tanker Trucks in Lima
  • Chapter 4.3: Everyday Struggles: Living without a Sewer Connection in Lima

MOOC Trailer

 


Lead Partner

Marcela López

Urban Geography

Diana Torres

Urban Sociology

Alhelí Zanella

Architecture

Team

Sharo López: content development team UrbesLab

Daniela Perleche Ugas, María Carolina Tuanama and María Fernanda Tuanama: design team UrbesLab

Kelly Gomez: INCITU-PUCP


News

In October 2024, co-developer Alhelí Zanella presented the recently released SMUS-MOOC at the International Congress “100 Años de Barriadas (100 years of slums): Changes, Persistencies, and Futures of Urbanization in Peru,” which took place at the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru (PUCP) in Lima. Read News post here