Mauritania : Urban Infrastructure and Pilot Decentralization Project

The project, implemented between 1996 and 2001 with World Bank funding of US$24 million had two components: (i) a program of poverty-oriented, labor-intensive works subprojects in participating cities, consisting of the rehabilitation or construction of urban infrastructure and community facilities; and (ii) capacity building ( pilot decentralization) at the municipal and national levels. The project capitalized on the work and experience gained by the country, the Region and the Bank through the earlier "highly satisfactory" Construction Capacity and Employment Project (CCEP). The project created approximately 46,281 man-months of temporary jobs- more than twice the projected number. There was a delegation of 125 contract management conventions covering 149 infrastructure construction and/or rehabilitation subprojects completed in 13 cities, which accounts for 85 percent of the urban population or 1.2 million inhabitants. Nouakchott and Nouadhibou consumed 40 percent of the investments, commensurate with their share of the urban population (37 percent). Of the 149 subprojects, 144 were fully executed (5 were under implementation in 2002) targeting the most under-serviced neighborhoods. Two-thirds of the subprojects were for educational and social infrastructure and contributed to the reduction of crowding, improvement of hygiene and security in schools, access to primary health, and, to a lesser extent, access to productive assets. Revenue-generating projects accounted for about 18 percent of the total coat of $15.4 million-these included the rehabilitation and/or construction of new markets, slaughterhouses, livestock enclosures, and taxi stations.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mohan, P.C.
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2003-10
Subjects:URBAN INFRASTRUCTURAL PROJECTS, DECENTRALIZATION OBJECTIVES, POVERTY REDUCTION, LABOR ALLOCATION, INFRASTRUCTURE REHABILITATION, COMMUNITY ACTION PLANNING PROCESSES, CAPACITY BUILDING PROCESS, CONSTRUCTION CALCULATIONS, EMPLOYMENT CREATION, CONSTRUCTION, SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE MANAGEMENT, HYGIENE BEHAVIOR, SECURITY MANAGEMENT, HEALTH ISSUES, REVENUE, SLAUGHTER HOUSES, LIVESTOCK DEVELOPMENT ACCOUNTING, ACCOUNTING PROCEDURES, ASSETS, AUDITS, CAPACITY BUILDING, CITIES, CITY DEVELOPMENT, CITY DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES, CITY PERFORMANCE, DECENTRALIZATION, EMPLOYMENT, LOCAL GOVERNMENT, MUNICIPALITIES, NEIGHBORHOODS, SCHOOLS, SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE, TAX REFORM, URBAN DEVELOPMENT, URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE, URBAN POPULATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/10/2810322/mauritania-urban-infrastructure-pilot-decentralization-project
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/9717
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spelling dig-okr-1098697172024-08-08T17:41:19Z Mauritania : Urban Infrastructure and Pilot Decentralization Project Mauritanie: Infrastructure urbaine et Projet pilote de Decentralisation Mohan, P.C. URBAN INFRASTRUCTURAL PROJECTS DECENTRALIZATION OBJECTIVES POVERTY REDUCTION LABOR ALLOCATION INFRASTRUCTURE REHABILITATION COMMUNITY ACTION PLANNING PROCESSES CAPACITY BUILDING PROCESS CONSTRUCTION CALCULATIONS EMPLOYMENT CREATION CONSTRUCTION SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE MANAGEMENT HYGIENE BEHAVIOR SECURITY MANAGEMENT HEALTH ISSUES REVENUE SLAUGHTER HOUSES LIVESTOCK DEVELOPMENT ACCOUNTING ACCOUNTING PROCEDURES ASSETS AUDITS CAPACITY BUILDING CITIES CITY DEVELOPMENT CITY DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES CITY PERFORMANCE DECENTRALIZATION EMPLOYMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENT MUNICIPALITIES NEIGHBORHOODS SCHOOLS SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE TAX REFORM URBAN DEVELOPMENT URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE URBAN POPULATION The project, implemented between 1996 and 2001 with World Bank funding of US$24 million had two components: (i) a program of poverty-oriented, labor-intensive works subprojects in participating cities, consisting of the rehabilitation or construction of urban infrastructure and community facilities; and (ii) capacity building ( pilot decentralization) at the municipal and national levels. The project capitalized on the work and experience gained by the country, the Region and the Bank through the earlier "highly satisfactory" Construction Capacity and Employment Project (CCEP). The project created approximately 46,281 man-months of temporary jobs- more than twice the projected number. There was a delegation of 125 contract management conventions covering 149 infrastructure construction and/or rehabilitation subprojects completed in 13 cities, which accounts for 85 percent of the urban population or 1.2 million inhabitants. Nouakchott and Nouadhibou consumed 40 percent of the investments, commensurate with their share of the urban population (37 percent). Of the 149 subprojects, 144 were fully executed (5 were under implementation in 2002) targeting the most under-serviced neighborhoods. Two-thirds of the subprojects were for educational and social infrastructure and contributed to the reduction of crowding, improvement of hygiene and security in schools, access to primary health, and, to a lesser extent, access to productive assets. Revenue-generating projects accounted for about 18 percent of the total coat of $15.4 million-these included the rehabilitation and/or construction of new markets, slaughterhouses, livestock enclosures, and taxi stations. 2012-08-13T09:21:34Z 2012-08-13T09:21:34Z 2003-10 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/10/2810322/mauritania-urban-infrastructure-pilot-decentralization-project https://hdl.handle.net/10986/9717 English Africa Region Findings & Good Practice Infobriefs; No. 93 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 INFRASTRUCTURAL PROJECTS
DECENTRALIZATION OBJECTIVES
POVERTY REDUCTION
LABOR ALLOCATION
INFRASTRUCTURE REHABILITATION
COMMUNITY ACTION PLANNING PROCESSES
CAPACITY BUILDING PROCESS
CONSTRUCTION CALCULATIONS
EMPLOYMENT CREATION
CONSTRUCTION
SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE MANAGEMENT
HYGIENE BEHAVIOR
SECURITY MANAGEMENT
HEALTH ISSUES
REVENUE
SLAUGHTER HOUSES
LIVESTOCK DEVELOPMENT ACCOUNTING
ACCOUNTING PROCEDURES
ASSETS
AUDITS
CAPACITY BUILDING
CITIES
CITY DEVELOPMENT
CITY DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
CITY PERFORMANCE
DECENTRALIZATION
EMPLOYMENT
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
MUNICIPALITIES
NEIGHBORHOODS
SCHOOLS
SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE
TAX REFORM
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE
URBAN POPULATION
URBAN INFRASTRUCTURAL PROJECTS
DECENTRALIZATION OBJECTIVES
POVERTY REDUCTION
LABOR ALLOCATION
INFRASTRUCTURE REHABILITATION
COMMUNITY ACTION PLANNING PROCESSES
CAPACITY BUILDING PROCESS
CONSTRUCTION CALCULATIONS
EMPLOYMENT CREATION
CONSTRUCTION
SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE MANAGEMENT
HYGIENE BEHAVIOR
SECURITY MANAGEMENT
HEALTH ISSUES
REVENUE
SLAUGHTER HOUSES
LIVESTOCK DEVELOPMENT ACCOUNTING
ACCOUNTING PROCEDURES
ASSETS
AUDITS
CAPACITY BUILDING
CITIES
CITY DEVELOPMENT
CITY DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
CITY PERFORMANCE
DECENTRALIZATION
EMPLOYMENT
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
MUNICIPALITIES
NEIGHBORHOODS
SCHOOLS
SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE
TAX REFORM
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE
URBAN POPULATION
spellingShingle URBAN INFRASTRUCTURAL PROJECTS
DECENTRALIZATION OBJECTIVES
POVERTY REDUCTION
LABOR ALLOCATION
INFRASTRUCTURE REHABILITATION
COMMUNITY ACTION PLANNING PROCESSES
CAPACITY BUILDING PROCESS
CONSTRUCTION CALCULATIONS
EMPLOYMENT CREATION
CONSTRUCTION
SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE MANAGEMENT
HYGIENE BEHAVIOR
SECURITY MANAGEMENT
HEALTH ISSUES
REVENUE
SLAUGHTER HOUSES
LIVESTOCK DEVELOPMENT ACCOUNTING
ACCOUNTING PROCEDURES
ASSETS
AUDITS
CAPACITY BUILDING
CITIES
CITY DEVELOPMENT
CITY DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
CITY PERFORMANCE
DECENTRALIZATION
EMPLOYMENT
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
MUNICIPALITIES
NEIGHBORHOODS
SCHOOLS
SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE
TAX REFORM
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE
URBAN POPULATION
URBAN INFRASTRUCTURAL PROJECTS
DECENTRALIZATION OBJECTIVES
POVERTY REDUCTION
LABOR ALLOCATION
INFRASTRUCTURE REHABILITATION
COMMUNITY ACTION PLANNING PROCESSES
CAPACITY BUILDING PROCESS
CONSTRUCTION CALCULATIONS
EMPLOYMENT CREATION
CONSTRUCTION
SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE MANAGEMENT
HYGIENE BEHAVIOR
SECURITY MANAGEMENT
HEALTH ISSUES
REVENUE
SLAUGHTER HOUSES
LIVESTOCK DEVELOPMENT ACCOUNTING
ACCOUNTING PROCEDURES
ASSETS
AUDITS
CAPACITY BUILDING
CITIES
CITY DEVELOPMENT
CITY DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
CITY PERFORMANCE
DECENTRALIZATION
EMPLOYMENT
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
MUNICIPALITIES
NEIGHBORHOODS
SCHOOLS
SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE
TAX REFORM
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE
URBAN POPULATION
Mohan, P.C.
Mauritania : Urban Infrastructure and Pilot Decentralization Project
description The project, implemented between 1996 and 2001 with World Bank funding of US$24 million had two components: (i) a program of poverty-oriented, labor-intensive works subprojects in participating cities, consisting of the rehabilitation or construction of urban infrastructure and community facilities; and (ii) capacity building ( pilot decentralization) at the municipal and national levels. The project capitalized on the work and experience gained by the country, the Region and the Bank through the earlier "highly satisfactory" Construction Capacity and Employment Project (CCEP). The project created approximately 46,281 man-months of temporary jobs- more than twice the projected number. There was a delegation of 125 contract management conventions covering 149 infrastructure construction and/or rehabilitation subprojects completed in 13 cities, which accounts for 85 percent of the urban population or 1.2 million inhabitants. Nouakchott and Nouadhibou consumed 40 percent of the investments, commensurate with their share of the urban population (37 percent). Of the 149 subprojects, 144 were fully executed (5 were under implementation in 2002) targeting the most under-serviced neighborhoods. Two-thirds of the subprojects were for educational and social infrastructure and contributed to the reduction of crowding, improvement of hygiene and security in schools, access to primary health, and, to a lesser extent, access to productive assets. Revenue-generating projects accounted for about 18 percent of the total coat of $15.4 million-these included the rehabilitation and/or construction of new markets, slaughterhouses, livestock enclosures, and taxi stations.
topic_facet URBAN INFRASTRUCTURAL PROJECTS
DECENTRALIZATION OBJECTIVES
POVERTY REDUCTION
LABOR ALLOCATION
INFRASTRUCTURE REHABILITATION
COMMUNITY ACTION PLANNING PROCESSES
CAPACITY BUILDING PROCESS
CONSTRUCTION CALCULATIONS
EMPLOYMENT CREATION
CONSTRUCTION
SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE MANAGEMENT
HYGIENE BEHAVIOR
SECURITY MANAGEMENT
HEALTH ISSUES
REVENUE
SLAUGHTER HOUSES
LIVESTOCK DEVELOPMENT ACCOUNTING
ACCOUNTING PROCEDURES
ASSETS
AUDITS
CAPACITY BUILDING
CITIES
CITY DEVELOPMENT
CITY DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
CITY PERFORMANCE
DECENTRALIZATION
EMPLOYMENT
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
MUNICIPALITIES
NEIGHBORHOODS
SCHOOLS
SOCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE
TAX REFORM
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE
URBAN POPULATION
author Mohan, P.C.
author_facet Mohan, P.C.
author_sort Mohan, P.C.
title Mauritania : Urban Infrastructure and Pilot Decentralization Project
title_short Mauritania : Urban Infrastructure and Pilot Decentralization Project
title_full Mauritania : Urban Infrastructure and Pilot Decentralization Project
title_fullStr Mauritania : Urban Infrastructure and Pilot Decentralization Project
title_full_unstemmed Mauritania : Urban Infrastructure and Pilot Decentralization Project
title_sort mauritania : urban infrastructure and pilot decentralization project
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2003-10
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/10/2810322/mauritania-urban-infrastructure-pilot-decentralization-project
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/9717
work_keys_str_mv AT mohanpc mauritaniaurbaninfrastructureandpilotdecentralizationproject
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