Water Governance in Tanzania

A co-creation approach to enhance social accountability monitoring for improved water Security

The government of Tanzania has made several legal and institutional frameworks to ensure fair water governance practices in water resources management, water supply, and sanitation. Notably, the Water Resources Management Act of 2009 and Environment Management Act of 2004 stipulate the protection of water resources through principles such as public participation and polluter pay.

Despite such efforts, vulnerable communities still suffer from water pollution, inadequate access to safe water, and lack of improved sanitation services. Particularly, communities in the Vingunguti ward in Dar es Salaam City comprises low-income households and lack access to sanitation services and reliable water supply. Consequently, due to unreliable sanitation services such as wastewater and solid waste collection, communities have turned the water of the Msimbazi River into dumping grounds.

Shahidi wa Maji, a local Tanzanian NGO, has been working with communities facing difficult water problems by implementing projects anchored on social accountability mechanisms. Particularly, the Accountability for Water Research Programme is implemented to improve water governance in Tanzania through evidence-based mechanisms coupled with action research to activate community voice and enhance uptake by the government.

In August 2024, the Shahidi wa Maji team visited communities in Majengo and Butiama neighbourhoods in the Vingunguti ward to understand difficult water problems and pinpoint community-based solutions that could potentially address such problems. At least 50 community members attended the meeting and shared practical solutions to water problems.


Mwajuma Briefing Citizens of Vingunguti about Co-creation Activity Implemented under the Accountability for Water Programme Phase Two


Three key lessons were drawn from the meeting: social problems require context-based solutions that reflect the communities’ social, economic, and cultural environments. Such solutions should come from community members. During the meeting, community members shared practical solutions to their contexts. Such solutions include addressing the problem of random dumping of solid wastes by using locally based solid waste collectors within the community and providing affordable services.

Secondly, addressing water problems requires robust social accountability monitoring mechanisms that allow citizens to monitor the performance of duty bearers in water service provision. One of the citizens said,

“We want feedback about the status of water supply services. Water authority promised to get us water, but we do not see water. We live in the city, but we are treated as outcasts. In other areas, such as Tabata, where middle-class people live, they get water daily. We want to know why Vingunguti people lack water, but Tabata has daily water supply, yet we are all Tanzanians and are all served by one water authority”.

The third lesson drawn from the meeting is that co-creation is at the heart of effective social accountability initiatives. Citizens expressed their interest in working with Shahidi wa Maji to ensure government authorities respond. One of the citizens, who was a neighbourhood leader, said,

“We want to work with Shahidi wa Maji to get the water supply and sanitation authority to respond to our problems. We do not get water on time. Water pipes are bursting, but the authorities do not fix them promptly. We hope to work with you to find answers”. 

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Accountable Governance and Making the Rights to Water and Sanitation a Reality: Mali Case Study