Publication: Africa's Water and Sanitation
Infrastructure : Access, Affordability, and Alternatives
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Date
2011-03-09
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Published
2011-03-09
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Abstract
The Africa Infrastructure Country Diagnostic (AICD) has produced continent-wide analysis of many aspects of Africa's infrastructure challenge. The main findings were synthesized in a flagship report titled Africa's Infrastructure: a time for transformation, published in November 2009. Meant for policy makers, that report necessarily focused on the high-level conclusions. It attracted widespread media coverage feeding directly into discussions at the 2009 African Union Commission Heads of State Summit on Infrastructure. Although the flagship report served a valuable role in highlighting the main findings of the project, it could not do full justice to the richness of the data collected and technical analysis undertaken. There was clearly a need to make this more detailed material available to a wider audience of infrastructure practitioners. Hence the idea of producing four technical monographs, such as this one, to provide detailed results on each of the major infrastructure sectors, information and communication technologies (ICT), power, transport, and water, as companions to the flagship report. These technical volumes are intended as reference books on each of the infrastructure sectors. They cover all aspects of the AICD project relevant to each sector, including sector performance, gaps in financing and efficiency, and estimates of the need for additional spending on investment, operations, and maintenance. Each volume also comes with a detailed data appendix, providing easy access to all the relevant infrastructure indicators at the country level, which is a resource in and of itself.
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“Banerjee, Sudeshna Ghosh; Morella, Elvira. Foster, Vivien; Briceño-Garmendia, Cecilia, editors. 2011. Africa's Water and Sanitation
Infrastructure : Access, Affordability, and Alternatives. Directions in Development ; infrastructure. © World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/2276 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.”
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