Regional WASH Officer | IRC Uganda
Mary Ayoreka Concepta is the Regional WASH Officer of IRC Uganda. She is based at IRC’s office in Fort Portal City. Mary Concepta holds a bachelor’s degree in Environmental Health Science from Makerere University - School of Public Health and is completing a Master of Public Health at the University of Manchester.
She has previously worked at Nansana Municipal Council and AMREF Health Africa and has 3 years’ experience in implementing and managing Environmental Health projects including Community Based Research, WASH integrated with communicable disease prevention and control, health and nutrition education and other public health support services.
Booklet providing an explanation of the conceptual background to the EMPOWERS approach to water governance, outlining the changing role of the expert... Read more...
This state of the art report provides: a conceptual introduction to learning alliances; case studies of current practice in Latin America, South... Read more...
Since Namibia is the most arid country in the Southern African Region and the water available is often of unacceptable quality, decision makers must... Read more...
This study explores how both multilateral and bilateral development agencies have acknowledged and tried to overcome the difficulties they face in... Read more...
More than ever before has the need to provide approximately 1.2 billion people in developing countries with adequate potable water been so urgent. Read more...
This book considers how contracting out can be further enhanced to deliver improved water and sanitation service provision in low- and middle-income... Read more...
Proceedings of an Urban Policy Workshop undertaken in Beijing in September 1999, which include four theme papers on urban policy perspectives in the... Read more...
This report focuses on health burdens in the countries of Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific (ACP), and the environmental problems that contribute... Read more...
Cities are home to more people than ever before. In 1900, only 160 million people, one tenth of the world's population, were city dwellers. Read more...