Bamako

This study focuses on Bamako, the capital of Mali, that dominates the country’s urban landscape. Acentral premise of policy-making in cities is that the flexibility, practicality, and focus of local governments make them ideal players to understand and respond to the needs of their citizens. Indeed, cities mostly aim their problem-solving at local conditions. In Mali, the economic importance of the capital city cannot be understated – it is the nerve center of the national economy. If the capital, Bamako, were to be removed, Mali would lose 36 percent of GDP. Thus, reforms and investments aimed at tackling urban development challenges in the capital will have knock-on effects on national economic development. This report also demonstrates how a variety of data could be used for urban innovations: opportunistic data, which is collected for one purpose and then used for another (such as data owned by cellphone companies and then used to understand urban mobility); purposely-sensed data, which is collected using cheap and ubiquitous sensors that can be deployed in public spaces (for instance, to better understand land and building use); and user-generated data, which comes from engaging people through social media platforms or crowdsourcing (for instance, through Open Street Map communities to track urban infrastructure investments and use). A summary of recommendations for unleashing Bamako’s potential includes coordinating land use and connective infrastructure, financing and managing better public service delivery, and investing in urban institutions.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank Group
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018-06-13
Subjects:URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE, SERVICE DELIVERY, URBAN SERVICES, CITY COMPETITIVENESS, URBAN DEVELOPMENT, CONNECTIVITY, LABOR MARKET, LAND MARKET, LAND USE, URBAN TRANSPORT, SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT, PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/154691549486819482/Bamako-Urban-Sector-Review-An-Engine-of-Growth-and-Service-Delivery
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/31321
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spelling dig-okr-10986313212024-08-07T19:23:31Z Bamako An Engine of Growth and Service Delivery World Bank Group URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICE DELIVERY URBAN SERVICES CITY COMPETITIVENESS URBAN DEVELOPMENT CONNECTIVITY LABOR MARKET LAND MARKET LAND USE URBAN TRANSPORT SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY This study focuses on Bamako, the capital of Mali, that dominates the country’s urban landscape. Acentral premise of policy-making in cities is that the flexibility, practicality, and focus of local governments make them ideal players to understand and respond to the needs of their citizens. Indeed, cities mostly aim their problem-solving at local conditions. In Mali, the economic importance of the capital city cannot be understated – it is the nerve center of the national economy. If the capital, Bamako, were to be removed, Mali would lose 36 percent of GDP. Thus, reforms and investments aimed at tackling urban development challenges in the capital will have knock-on effects on national economic development. This report also demonstrates how a variety of data could be used for urban innovations: opportunistic data, which is collected for one purpose and then used for another (such as data owned by cellphone companies and then used to understand urban mobility); purposely-sensed data, which is collected using cheap and ubiquitous sensors that can be deployed in public spaces (for instance, to better understand land and building use); and user-generated data, which comes from engaging people through social media platforms or crowdsourcing (for instance, through Open Street Map communities to track urban infrastructure investments and use). A summary of recommendations for unleashing Bamako’s potential includes coordinating land use and connective infrastructure, financing and managing better public service delivery, and investing in urban institutions. 2019-02-25T17:28:11Z 2019-02-25T17:28:11Z 2018-06-13 Report Rapport Informe http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/154691549486819482/Bamako-Urban-Sector-Review-An-Engine-of-Growth-and-Service-Delivery https://hdl.handle.net/10986/31321 English 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
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE
SERVICE DELIVERY
URBAN SERVICES
CITY COMPETITIVENESS
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
CONNECTIVITY
LABOR MARKET
LAND MARKET
LAND USE
URBAN TRANSPORT
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY
URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE
SERVICE DELIVERY
URBAN SERVICES
CITY COMPETITIVENESS
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
CONNECTIVITY
LABOR MARKET
LAND MARKET
LAND USE
URBAN TRANSPORT
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY
spellingShingle URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE
SERVICE DELIVERY
URBAN SERVICES
CITY COMPETITIVENESS
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
CONNECTIVITY
LABOR MARKET
LAND MARKET
LAND USE
URBAN TRANSPORT
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY
URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE
SERVICE DELIVERY
URBAN SERVICES
CITY COMPETITIVENESS
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
CONNECTIVITY
LABOR MARKET
LAND MARKET
LAND USE
URBAN TRANSPORT
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY
World Bank Group
Bamako
description This study focuses on Bamako, the capital of Mali, that dominates the country’s urban landscape. Acentral premise of policy-making in cities is that the flexibility, practicality, and focus of local governments make them ideal players to understand and respond to the needs of their citizens. Indeed, cities mostly aim their problem-solving at local conditions. In Mali, the economic importance of the capital city cannot be understated – it is the nerve center of the national economy. If the capital, Bamako, were to be removed, Mali would lose 36 percent of GDP. Thus, reforms and investments aimed at tackling urban development challenges in the capital will have knock-on effects on national economic development. This report also demonstrates how a variety of data could be used for urban innovations: opportunistic data, which is collected for one purpose and then used for another (such as data owned by cellphone companies and then used to understand urban mobility); purposely-sensed data, which is collected using cheap and ubiquitous sensors that can be deployed in public spaces (for instance, to better understand land and building use); and user-generated data, which comes from engaging people through social media platforms or crowdsourcing (for instance, through Open Street Map communities to track urban infrastructure investments and use). A summary of recommendations for unleashing Bamako’s potential includes coordinating land use and connective infrastructure, financing and managing better public service delivery, and investing in urban institutions.
format Report
topic_facet URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE
SERVICE DELIVERY
URBAN SERVICES
CITY COMPETITIVENESS
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
CONNECTIVITY
LABOR MARKET
LAND MARKET
LAND USE
URBAN TRANSPORT
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY
author World Bank Group
author_facet World Bank Group
author_sort World Bank Group
title Bamako
title_short Bamako
title_full Bamako
title_fullStr Bamako
title_full_unstemmed Bamako
title_sort bamako
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018-06-13
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/154691549486819482/Bamako-Urban-Sector-Review-An-Engine-of-Growth-and-Service-Delivery
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/31321
work_keys_str_mv AT worldbankgroup bamako
AT worldbankgroup anengineofgrowthandservicedelivery
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