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Revisiting Open Defecation: Evidence from a Panel Survey in Rural North India, 2014-18. | LitMetric

Revisiting Open Defecation: Evidence from a Panel Survey in Rural North India, 2014-18.

Econ Polit Wkly

Aashish Gupta, Nazar Khalid, Payal Hathi, Nikhil Srivastav, Sangita Vyas, Dean Spears, and Diane Coffey conduct research with r.i.c.e. Devashish Deshpande and Avani Kapur work with Accountability Initiative at the Centre for Policy Research. Gupta is affiliated with University of Pennsylvania; Hathi with UC Berkeley; and Srivastav, Vyas, Spears, and Coffey with University of Texas, Austin. Spears is also Research Fellow at IZA and an Affiliated Researcher at IFFS.

Published: May 2020

Since October 2014, the Government of India has worked towards the goal of eliminating open defecation by 2019 through the Swachh Bharat Mission. Since October 2014, the Government of India (GOI) has worked towards the goal of eliminating open defecation by 2019 through the Swachh Bharat Mission (SBM). In 2014, several of the co-authors reported on a survey of rural sanitation behaviour in North India (Coffey et al 2014) conducted by the Research Institute for Compassionate Economics (r.i.c.e.). Different statistical methods produce slightly different numbers, but results from a wide range of approaches used concur that approximately 40% to 50% of rural people in these states defecated in the open in late 2018. The 2014 survey used a multistage sampling strategy to select households: first, districts were purposively selected to match the state-level trend in rural open defecation between the 2001 and 2011 Censuses; second, villages were randomly drawn using proportional-to-size sampling from a frame taken from the Government of India's District Level Health Survey; third, households were selected using an in-field randomisation technique similar to that used for Pratham's Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) survey.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10824488PMC

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