Framing the Social Contract

The Arab Uprisings demonstrated a need for a new social contract in Maghreb countries as well as likely other regions, built on greater citizen trust, and inclusive and accountable service delivery. The brief focuses on key elements of the Social Contract, by comparing data from Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia: Women, youth, and marginalized groups need to be engaged in the social dialogue, and receive observed benefits from social services for a more inclusive Social Contract; Reforms should be geared towards improving service delivery at the municipal, national and regional levels across different sectors (health, education, water, electricity, etc.); Citizen engagement can strengthen the Social Contract between government and citizens, by making it more inclusive and providing feedback to improve the quality of services, address constraints, etc.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gold, Jenny, Harati, Elissar Tatum
Format: Brief biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018-07
Subjects:SERVICE DELIVERY, PUBLIC SPENDING, SOCIAL INCLUSION, SOCIAL ASSISTANCE, CITIZEN ENGAGEMENT, INEQUALITY, POVERTY ALLEVIATION, PRIORITIES, GENDER, DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN, MUNICIPAL SERVICES, HEALTH SERVICES, EDUCATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/169211534269547790/Framing-the-social-contract-a-review-of-Algeria-Morocco-and-Tunisia
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/30276
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spelling dig-okr-10986302762024-08-07T19:19:53Z Framing the Social Contract A Review of Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia Gold, Jenny Harati, Elissar Tatum SERVICE DELIVERY PUBLIC SPENDING SOCIAL INCLUSION SOCIAL ASSISTANCE CITIZEN ENGAGEMENT INEQUALITY POVERTY ALLEVIATION PRIORITIES GENDER DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN MUNICIPAL SERVICES HEALTH SERVICES EDUCATION The Arab Uprisings demonstrated a need for a new social contract in Maghreb countries as well as likely other regions, built on greater citizen trust, and inclusive and accountable service delivery. The brief focuses on key elements of the Social Contract, by comparing data from Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia: Women, youth, and marginalized groups need to be engaged in the social dialogue, and receive observed benefits from social services for a more inclusive Social Contract; Reforms should be geared towards improving service delivery at the municipal, national and regional levels across different sectors (health, education, water, electricity, etc.); Citizen engagement can strengthen the Social Contract between government and citizens, by making it more inclusive and providing feedback to improve the quality of services, address constraints, etc. 2018-08-21T20:22:52Z 2018-08-21T20:22:52Z 2018-07 Brief Fiche Resumen http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/169211534269547790/Framing-the-social-contract-a-review-of-Algeria-Morocco-and-Tunisia https://hdl.handle.net/10986/30276 English HNP Knowledge Brief; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
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country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
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tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic SERVICE DELIVERY
PUBLIC SPENDING
SOCIAL INCLUSION
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
CITIZEN ENGAGEMENT
INEQUALITY
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
PRIORITIES
GENDER
DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN
MUNICIPAL SERVICES
HEALTH SERVICES
EDUCATION
SERVICE DELIVERY
PUBLIC SPENDING
SOCIAL INCLUSION
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
CITIZEN ENGAGEMENT
INEQUALITY
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
PRIORITIES
GENDER
DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN
MUNICIPAL SERVICES
HEALTH SERVICES
EDUCATION
spellingShingle SERVICE DELIVERY
PUBLIC SPENDING
SOCIAL INCLUSION
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
CITIZEN ENGAGEMENT
INEQUALITY
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
PRIORITIES
GENDER
DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN
MUNICIPAL SERVICES
HEALTH SERVICES
EDUCATION
SERVICE DELIVERY
PUBLIC SPENDING
SOCIAL INCLUSION
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
CITIZEN ENGAGEMENT
INEQUALITY
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
PRIORITIES
GENDER
DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN
MUNICIPAL SERVICES
HEALTH SERVICES
EDUCATION
Gold, Jenny
Harati, Elissar Tatum
Framing the Social Contract
description The Arab Uprisings demonstrated a need for a new social contract in Maghreb countries as well as likely other regions, built on greater citizen trust, and inclusive and accountable service delivery. The brief focuses on key elements of the Social Contract, by comparing data from Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia: Women, youth, and marginalized groups need to be engaged in the social dialogue, and receive observed benefits from social services for a more inclusive Social Contract; Reforms should be geared towards improving service delivery at the municipal, national and regional levels across different sectors (health, education, water, electricity, etc.); Citizen engagement can strengthen the Social Contract between government and citizens, by making it more inclusive and providing feedback to improve the quality of services, address constraints, etc.
format Brief
topic_facet SERVICE DELIVERY
PUBLIC SPENDING
SOCIAL INCLUSION
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
CITIZEN ENGAGEMENT
INEQUALITY
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
PRIORITIES
GENDER
DISCRIMINATION AGAINST WOMEN
MUNICIPAL SERVICES
HEALTH SERVICES
EDUCATION
author Gold, Jenny
Harati, Elissar Tatum
author_facet Gold, Jenny
Harati, Elissar Tatum
author_sort Gold, Jenny
title Framing the Social Contract
title_short Framing the Social Contract
title_full Framing the Social Contract
title_fullStr Framing the Social Contract
title_full_unstemmed Framing the Social Contract
title_sort framing the social contract
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018-07
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/169211534269547790/Framing-the-social-contract-a-review-of-Algeria-Morocco-and-Tunisia
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/30276
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