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Assessing community participation for sustainable development : the Galanefhi water supply projectHaile Gebremedhin, Solomon 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPA)--University of Stellenbosch, 2004. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: In the past, development projects were not successful, because development was guided by
top-down strategy that excluded the main beneficiaries from the process of development. The
creative initiative, local knowledge, and inputs of communities were not considered as a
development resource. Hence, development programmes were not participatory, and could
not solve social problems, rather they contributed to poverty and dependency. This condition
gave rise to new thinking that unless communities participate in development efforts, no
social transformation can be achieved. Moreover, the scarcity of resources in developing
countries called for the mobilization of all stakeholders' resources in the cause of
development action. As a result, community participation emerged as a new paradigm of
development. Development has become a humanizing process; projects are people-driven;
and communities are the subjects of development projects. Nevertheless, in order for
community participation to meet the challenges of development, this has to be a
multidimensional approach that integrates the building blocks of development.
Against this background, in the context of water supply, the experience of developing
countries indicates that the effectiveness of water supply projects is improved when
communities participate in all phases of water supply projects. Moreover, community owned
and managed water supply projects are better constructed, cost effective, and successful than
government subsidized projects. Nevertheless, the role of government in enabling and
supporting is essential.
The study is an evaluation research, which aims to assess whether community participation is
in place, and whether the delivery of water supply is enhanced as a result of community
participation. The study area is in Galanefhi, a sub-region in Eritrea. At eleven villages in the
sub-region, water supply projects that were constructed in the past twelve years are assessed
to evaluate if community participation is in place and its effect on the water supply system.
During the course of this study, interviews were conducted with 221 respondents of both
sexes from the age of 28 years using open and closed-ended questionnaires. In addition,
discussions were conducted with community representatives and government officials on
issues of community participation and safe water delivery.
Findings of the study indicate that the level of community participation differs within the
villages and from one phase of the project to another. There is more community participation
in implementation and less in planning. Decision-making is dominated by the water committees and local officials. The major missing ingredient is the level of capacity building.
Communities' capacity to manage and operate the water supply system is limited. The
institutional and administrative frameworks of the villages regarding water supply is weak.
The regional and sub-region authorities' capacity that implements and oversees water supply
projects is not strong. Communication between the grassroots and central authorities is not
good. This is aggravated by natural conditions like climate and environment, and by the lack
of skilled human resources, financial drawbacks, and lack of coordination. Nevertheless,
overall assessment shows that water supply projects that enjoy more community participation
are more successful and sustainable and more capable of meeting communities' expectations.
Therefore, sustainable clean and adequate water delivery can be achieved through community
participation in collaboration with all stakeholders. The recommendations which are provided
give some insights on how to implement community participation as a strategy on the ground. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: In die verlede was ontwikkelingsprojekte dikwels onsuksesvolomdat ontwikkeling oorheers
is deur die bo-na-onder ("top-down") strategie wat die hoof voordeeltrekkers uitgesluit het uit
die proses van ontwikkeling. Die skeppende inisiatief, plaaslike kennis en die insette van die
gemeenskappe is nie as 'n hulpbron beskou nie. Dus was die ontwikkelingsprogramme nie
deelhebbend van aard nie en kon hulle nie sosiale probleme oplos nie. Dit het eerder bygedra
tot armoede en afhanklikheid. Hierdie toestand het gelei tot 'n nuwe denkrigting, naamlik dat,
tensy gemeenskappe deelneem aan ontwikkelingspogings, geen sosiale transformasie sal
plaasvind nie. Weens die skaarsheid van hulpbronne in ontwikkelende lande is die
mobilisasaie van al die deelhebbers se hulpbronne nodig vir ontwikkelingsaksie. Gevolglik
het gemeenskapsdeelname te vore getree as die nuwe paradigma van ontwikkeling.
Ontwikkeling is meer op die mens gerig; projekte word deur die mens gedryf; en
gemeenskappe IS die onderwerp van die ontwikkelingsprojekte. Nietemin, as
gemeenskapsdeelname die uitdagings van ontwikkeling te bowe wil kom, moet daar 'n
multidimensionele benadering wees wat die boustene van ontwikkeling integreer.
Teen hierdie agtergrond, en in die konteks van watervoorsiening, het die ondervindings in
ontwikkelende lande aangedui dat die effektiwiteit van watervoorsieningsprojekte verbeter as
die gemeenskap deelneem aan al die fases van die projek. Ook is watervoorsieningsprojekte
wat deur die gemeenskap besit en bestuur word, beter gebou, meer koste-effektief, en meer
suksesvol as projekte wat deur die regering subsideer is. Nietemin is die rol van die regering
onontbeerlik waar dit die projekte moontlik maak en ondersteun.
Hierdie studie is evaluasie-navorsing wat ten doel het om vas te stel tot watter mate
gemeenskapdeelname bestaan en of die voorsiening van water verbeter het as gevolg van die
deelname. Die studiegebied is in Galanefhi, 'n substeek van Eritrea. Daar is by elf dorpies in
hierdie streek tydens die laaste twaalf jaar watervoorsieningspunte opgerig. Hierdie projekte
is evalueer om vas te stel hoeveel gemeenskapdeelname daar was en die effek daarvan op die
watervoorsiening. Tydens die studie is onderhoude gevoer met 221 respondente, mans en
vrouens, bo 28. Daar is gebruik gemaak van vraelyste. Ook is daar besprekings gevoer met
verteenwoordigers van gemeenskappe en regeringsamptenare oor kwessies soos
gemeenskapsdeelname en die voorsiening van veilige drinkwater.
Daar is gevind dat die vlak van deelname verskil van dorpie tot dorpie en van een fase van die
projek tot die volgende. Daar is meer gemeenskapsdeelname in implementasie en minder in
beplanning. Besluitneming word oorheers deur waterkomitees en plaaslike amptenare. Daar is me 'n hoë vlak van vermoë-bou me. Die vermoë van die gemeenskap om die
watervoorsieningsisteem te bestuur is beperk en die administratiewe raamwerk van die
dorpies betreffende watervoorsiening is swak. Die vermoë van die owerhede op streek- en
substreekvlak, asook die kommunikasie tussen die sentrale owerhede en die gewone inwoners
is nie na wense nie. Hierdie toestande word vererger deur die klimaat en die
omgewingsfaktore, die gebrek aan geskoolde werkers, finansiële probleme en die gebrek aan
koërdinasie, Nietemin is daar in die algemeen vasgestel dat die watervoorsieningsprojekte
waar daar meer gemeenskapsdeelname was, meer suksesvol is, en beter aan die gemeenskap
se verwagtinge voldoen. Die waterpunte word ook langer in 'n goeie werkende toestand
gehou.
Dus kan die voorsiening van genoeg skoon water bereik word deur die deelname van die
gemeenskap en die samewerking van al diegene wat belang het by die projek. Aan die einde
van die studie word daar aanbeveel hoe om gemeenskapsdeelname op grondvlak te
implementeer.
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A model of community-based urban renewal in the context of Hong KongYang, Tse-chyi, Max., 楊世奇. January 2000 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Urban Planning / Master / Master of Science in Urban Planning
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Public participation and urban renewal in Hong Kong: comparative case studies of two urban renewal projectsLi, Wai-sze, Freda., 李慧施. January 1999 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Urban Planning / Master / Master of Science in Urban Planning
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Resistance in small spaces : citizen opposition to privatisation in health carevan Mossel, Catherine 10 April 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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Perspectives on citizen participation with the Urban Renewal Agency in Manhattan, KansasGallant, Debera Weaver. January 1974 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .P7 1974 G34
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The effect of public participation in land-use planning on the concept of ownership in South AfricaBurdzik, Adriana Maria Anna 12 January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
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The power and limits of social movements in promoting political and constitutional change: the case of the Ufungamano Initiative in Kenya (1999-2005)Mati, Jacob Mwathi 25 July 2012 (has links)
Ph.D.--University of the Witwatersrand, Faculty of Humanities, 2012 / The Kenyan political landscape has, since the 1990’s, been tumultuous and characterised by multiple political and social struggles centred on embedding a new constitutional order. This thesis is a qualitative case study of the Ufungamano Initiative, a powerful movement involved in these struggles between 1999 and 2005. Emerging in an environment of deep societal divisions and multiple sites of struggle, the Ufungamano Initiative is a remarkable story of how and why previously disjointed and disparate individuals and groups came together in a ‘movement of movements’ to become a critical contender in Kenyan constitutional reforms. The movement utilised direct citizens’ actions and was directly in competition with the Moi/KANU state for control of the Constitution Reform Process. This direct competition and challenge, posed a legitimacy crisis on the state led process forcing an autocratic and intolerant regime to capitulate and open up space for democratic engagement of citizens in the Constitution Reform Process. But the Ufungamano Initiative is also a story of the limits of social movements. While holding so much power and promise, movements are limited in their ability to effect fundamental changes in society. Even after substantial gains in challenging the state, the Ufungamano Initiative was vulnerable and agreed to enter a ‘coerced’ merger with the state-led process in 2001. The merger dissipated the Ufungamano Initiative’s energy.
This study therefore speaks to the power and limits of social movements in effecting fundamental changes in society. Applying a socio-historical approach, the study locates the Ufungamano Initiative within the broader social, economic and political struggles to argue that contemporary constitutional reform struggles in Kenya were, in Polanyi’s (1944) terms, double movement type of societal counter-movements to protect itself from an avaricious economic and political elites. Engaging the political process model, this thesis analyses seventy in-depth interviews and secondary data to explain the dynamics in the rise, operations, achievements and decline of the Ufungamano Initiative as illustrative of how movements emerge, take on a life of their own and sometimes metamorphose into phenomenal forces of change, or just fizzle out.
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Empowerment of the urban poor through participation in decision making and delivery of physical infrastructureKhawula, Philisile Dorcas January 1996 (has links)
A discourse submitted to the Faculty of Architecture, Department of
Town and Regional Planning, University of the Witwatersrand
Johannesburq, in partial fulfillment of the requirement for the degree of
Master of Science in Development Planning. / Andrew Chakane 2018
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Community participation in planning and design process: regeneration of an elderly estate.January 2001 (has links)
Chan Hou Chi Carrie. / "Architecture Department, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Master of Architecture Programme 2000-2001, design report." / Includes bibliographical references (p. [195-196]). / prologue --- p.p. 2-3 / literature research --- p.p. 5 - 22 / urban regeneration in hong kong --- p.p. 6- 10 / community participation in planning and design process --- p.p. 11 -20 / synopsis --- p.p. 21 - 22 / site selection and site analysis --- p.p. 23 - 52 / site selection strategies --- p.p. 24 / proposed sites --- p.p. 24 - 27 / site analysis --- p.p. 28 - 48 / project potentials and constraints --- p.p. 49 - 52 / program --- p.p. 53 - 62 / project brief --- p.p. 54 / project mission --- p.p. 55 / application of community participation in the project --- p.p. 55 - 62 / reference / appendix / interviews
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Government legislation on health planning in the United States from 1935-1984 with an emphasis on citizens participation in health planningHarris, Michael Philip January 2010 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
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