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SEI at the Conference for Advancing the Participatory Sciences: the Mexico WASH citizen science project

Rachel Pateman presented how we have worked with the community organization El Caracol and unhoused people in Mexico City to co-create a citizen science project to understand their access to WASH (Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene). Rachel shared our methods and the lessons we learnt at each stage of the project. See her presentation.

5 June 2024 at 16:00 EDT

ending at 18:00 EDT

Online only
A wall display hand made out of coloured card and paper, with a large alarm clock split into thirds with the words 'mañana', 'tarde' and 'noche' and corresponding illustrations indicating morning, afternoon and night, surrounded by coloured cards with text and pictures of water bottles, buckets and footprints.

An exercise with the community to understand their water access needs and experiences throughout the day.

Photo: SEI team

Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) services in urban areas are vital for public health. However, data on their availability, quality, and accessibility is often lacking, particularly in Latin America’s cities where many facilities are unsafe or poorly maintained. The COVID-19 pandemic in Mexico City highlighted these issues, as limited access to WASH forced unhoused individuals into open defecation. This disproportionately affected women and girls, perpetuating health inequalities.

Citizen science methods have proven to be a successful approach in increasing awareness, knowledge, engagement, and action on environmental and urban issues, and they offer new opportunities for data collection in the context of water, sanitation, and hygiene.

We partnered with community organization El Caracol and unhoused people in Mexico City to co-create a citizen science project in which WASH facilities were mapped and rated according to criteria defined by the community. In this presentation, Rachel shared our methods and the lessons we learnt at each stage of the project. In particular, how El Caracol helped us to creatively adapt our methods to ensure they were appropriate for the marginalized people we were working with.

Rachel’s talk was titled “Understanding water and sanitation challenges among Mexico City’s homeless population through co-created citizen science“. It formed part of the Co-production & Co-design session on day 3 of the 2024 Conference for Advancing the Participatory Sciences.

You are welcome to download Rachel’s presentation (link below). Please contact Rachel if you wish to share share this presentation through other channels, or use any of the content, thank you.

Rachel Pateman

Speaker

SEI York

Carla Liera
Carla Liera

Project team

SEI Headquarters

Nhilce N. Esquivel
Nhilce N. Esquivel

Project team

SEI Headquarters

Cláudia Coleoni

Project team

SEI Latin America

This work was led by Carla Liera and Nhilce Esquivel at SEI HQ, building on their existing work with this community, with Rachel Pateman contributing expertise in citizen science. Rachel is part of SEI York’s Citizen Science Research Group which has been designing, running, evaluating, and consulting on citizen science projects on a wide range of topics since 2008, as well as publishing impactful research on Citizen Science theory.

Design and development by Soapbox.