Deterring Corruption and Improving Governance in the Urban Water & Sanitation Sector
Keywords
SERVICE STANDARDSCAPITAL PROJECTS
MONOPOLY
AUDITING
ACCOUNTABILITY
GOVERNANCE ARRANGEMENTS
ANTI-CORRUPTION
ASSETS
HUMAN RESOURCES
GOOD GOVERNANCE
DECISION-MAKERS
DECENTRALIZATION
PENALTIES
PERFORMANCE AGREEMENT
SANCTIONS
LEAST COST
ANTICORRUPTION
PUBLIC WATER
UTILITIES
ACCRUAL ACCOUNTING
KICKBACKS
URBAN WATER
PUBLIC MONEY
MINISTERS
POOR GOVERNANCE
BRIBES
UTILITY MANAGERS
DEGREE OF AUTONOMY
CITIZENS
BRIBE
DISCLOSURE OF INFORMATION
GOVERNANCE ISSUES
POLITICAL ECONOMY
SECTORAL OUTCOMES
SANITATION SECTOR
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
PRIVATE PARTICIPATION
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
SANITATION PROVIDERS
AUTHORITY
CORRUPTION
PUBLIC FUNDS
ANTICORRUPTION STRATEGY
PATRONAGE
EXPENDITURE
MEASURING CORRUPTION
MUNICIPAL DEVELOPMENT
WATER DEPARTMENT
DISCLOSURE
PERFORMANCE AGREEMENTS
WATER QUALITY
INCOME
SANITATION SERVICES
IMPROVING GOVERNANCE
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
PROCUREMENT
SERVICE PROVISION
ACCOUNTING
WATER SUPPLY
WATER SECTOR
ACCOUNTING SYSTEMS
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11737Abstract
Governments typically provide the water and sanitation sector with substantial amounts of public money. Monopoly power, public funds, and discretionary decisions, coupled with poor accountability, breed corruption. The best hope for reducing corruption in the water and sanitation sector is to incentivize water sector officials and managers to be responsive to citizens' demands.Date
2012-08-13Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/11737http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11737
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
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Berg Water Project : Communication
 Practices for Governance and Sustainability ImprovementRossouw, Nigel; Haas, Lawrence J. M.; Mazzei, Leonardo; O'Leary, Donal T. (World Bank, 2012-03-19)The past decade has witnessed a major
 global shift in thinking about water, including the role
 that water infrastructure plays in sustainable development.
 This rethinking aims to better balance the social, economic,
 and environmental performance aspects in the development and
 management of large dams. Additionally, it reinforces
 efforts to combat poverty by ensuring more equitable access
 to water and energy services. There is also growing
 appreciation of how broad-based policy reforms come into
 play and influence decisions around issues related to dams.
 Apart from democratization of the development process
 itself, it is increasingly recognized that infrastructure
 strategies must complement strategies for water,
 environment, and energy security; they must also address
 emerging concerns to reduce vulnerability in water resource
 systems due to the probability of climate change.
 Communication comes to the forefront in modern approaches to
 dam planning and management in several respects.
 Communication is central to multi-stakeholder dialogue and
 partnerships at all levels needed to achieve sustainability
 and governance reform in water resource management and
 infrastructure provision. At the same time, communication
 drives the advocacy to mobilize political will and public
 support for beneficial change and continuous improvement in
 practices. This case study emphasizes that it is important
 not only to mobilize all opportunities to reconcile water
 demand and supply in river basins facing increasing levels
 of water stress, but also to effectively integrate
 governance and anticorruption reforms and sustainability
 improvements into all stages of the planning and project
 cycle-adding value for all stakeholders, not just for some
 of them.
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Berg Water Project : Communication Practices for Governance and Sustainability ImprovementMazzei, Leonardo; Rossouw, Nigel; Haas, Lawrence J. M.; O'Leary, Donal T. (World Bank, 2010-06-01)The past decade has witnessed a major global shift in thinking about water, including the role that water infrastructure plays in sustainable development. This rethinking aims to better balance the social, economic, and environmental performance aspects in the development and management of large dams. Additionally, it reinforces efforts to combat poverty by ensuring more equitable access to water and energy services. There is also growing appreciation of how broad-based policy reforms come into play and influence decisions around issues related to dams. Apart from democratization of the development process itself, it is increasingly recognized that infrastructure strategies must complement strategies for water, environment, and energy security; they must also address emerging concerns to reduce vulnerability in water resource systems due to the probability of climate change. Communication comes to the forefront in modern approaches to dam planning and management in several respects. Communication is central to multi-stakeholder dialogue and partnerships at all levels needed to achieve sustainability and governance reform in water resource management and infrastructure provision. At the same time, communication drives the advocacy to mobilize political will and public support for beneficial change and continuous improvement in practices. This case study emphasizes that it is important not only to mobilize all opportunities to reconcile water demand and supply in river basins facing increasing levels of water stress, but also to effectively integrate governance and anticorruption reforms and sustainability improvements into all stages of the planning and project cycle-adding value for all stakeholders, not just for some of them.
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