Assessing public sector road construction projects’ critical success factors in a developing economy: Definitive stakeholders’ perspective

This study assessed the critical success factors (CSFs) of public-sector road construction projects execution from the perspective of definitive stakeholders associated with such projects by drawing on in-depth semi-structured interviews (16) and surveys (372) in Ghana, thirty-four (34) CSF...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Isaac Sakyi Damoah, Anthony Ayakwah, Paul Twum
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Growing Science 2022-01-01
Series:Journal of Project Management
Online Access:http://www.growingscience.com/jpm/Vol7/jpm_2021_17.pdf
id doaj-3dcb12b517e94c5185a9c91710b4c41b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3dcb12b517e94c5185a9c91710b4c41b2021-09-23T08:40:47ZengGrowing ScienceJournal of Project Management2371-83662371-83742022-01-0171233410.5267/j.jpm.2021.7.003Assessing public sector road construction projects’ critical success factors in a developing economy: Definitive stakeholders’ perspectiveIsaac Sakyi DamoahAnthony AyakwahPaul Twum This study assessed the critical success factors (CSFs) of public-sector road construction projects execution from the perspective of definitive stakeholders associated with such projects by drawing on in-depth semi-structured interviews (16) and surveys (372) in Ghana, thirty-four (34) CSFs were identified. Using Relative Importance Index (RII), Spearman Rank Correlation Coefficients, and Kendall’s Coefficient of Concordance and the Chi-square test of significance statistics, the top ten most important factors in descending order are: the absence of political interference, project continuity by successive governments, adequate project funding, support from financial institutions and donor agencies and countries, government commitment to the project, absence of clientelism, absence of nepotism, no political corruption, payments of contractors on time and absence of court injunction or legal suit and land litigations. This study contributes to road construction CSFs in the context of public sector road construction in developing economies.http://www.growingscience.com/jpm/Vol7/jpm_2021_17.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Isaac Sakyi Damoah
Anthony Ayakwah
Paul Twum
spellingShingle Isaac Sakyi Damoah
Anthony Ayakwah
Paul Twum
Assessing public sector road construction projects’ critical success factors in a developing economy: Definitive stakeholders’ perspective
Journal of Project Management
author_facet Isaac Sakyi Damoah
Anthony Ayakwah
Paul Twum
author_sort Isaac Sakyi Damoah
title Assessing public sector road construction projects’ critical success factors in a developing economy: Definitive stakeholders’ perspective
title_short Assessing public sector road construction projects’ critical success factors in a developing economy: Definitive stakeholders’ perspective
title_full Assessing public sector road construction projects’ critical success factors in a developing economy: Definitive stakeholders’ perspective
title_fullStr Assessing public sector road construction projects’ critical success factors in a developing economy: Definitive stakeholders’ perspective
title_full_unstemmed Assessing public sector road construction projects’ critical success factors in a developing economy: Definitive stakeholders’ perspective
title_sort assessing public sector road construction projects’ critical success factors in a developing economy: definitive stakeholders’ perspective
publisher Growing Science
series Journal of Project Management
issn 2371-8366
2371-8374
publishDate 2022-01-01
description This study assessed the critical success factors (CSFs) of public-sector road construction projects execution from the perspective of definitive stakeholders associated with such projects by drawing on in-depth semi-structured interviews (16) and surveys (372) in Ghana, thirty-four (34) CSFs were identified. Using Relative Importance Index (RII), Spearman Rank Correlation Coefficients, and Kendall’s Coefficient of Concordance and the Chi-square test of significance statistics, the top ten most important factors in descending order are: the absence of political interference, project continuity by successive governments, adequate project funding, support from financial institutions and donor agencies and countries, government commitment to the project, absence of clientelism, absence of nepotism, no political corruption, payments of contractors on time and absence of court injunction or legal suit and land litigations. This study contributes to road construction CSFs in the context of public sector road construction in developing economies.
url http://www.growingscience.com/jpm/Vol7/jpm_2021_17.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT isaacsakyidamoah assessingpublicsectorroadconstructionprojects8217criticalsuccessfactorsinadevelopingeconomydefinitivestakeholders8217perspective
AT anthonyayakwah assessingpublicsectorroadconstructionprojects8217criticalsuccessfactorsinadevelopingeconomydefinitivestakeholders8217perspective
AT paultwum assessingpublicsectorroadconstructionprojects8217criticalsuccessfactorsinadevelopingeconomydefinitivestakeholders8217perspective
_version_ 1717370513571971072