An institutional model of water resources administration in Congo

Adequate Water Resources Administration in Congo is a major concern for its government and its people. Water resources administration is a dilemma for government throughout the world, and Congo is no exception. An assessment of water resources administration practices in Congo today reveals several...

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Main Author: Boubeka, Jacques.
Other Authors: Ince, Simon
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 1996
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191328
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1913282015-10-23T04:37:00Z An institutional model of water resources administration in Congo Boubeka, Jacques. Ince, Simon Buras, N. Bradley, M. Adequate Water Resources Administration in Congo is a major concern for its government and its people. Water resources administration is a dilemma for government throughout the world, and Congo is no exception. An assessment of water resources administration practices in Congo today reveals several inadequacies attributable to deficiencies in the framework for decision making in the use and allocation of water resources. Actually, the entire field of water resources administration is dominated by one level the national government. In Congo, there is no water law to guide water development. It is known today that the administration of water resources in Congo is notorious for its inability to provide for the public welfare, partly because the structure of decision making is not conducive to an accurate definition of the public interest. There are no specific water organizations at the local level to represent water users and provide the delivery of essential water services, whereas this is the area which is critical to the enhancement of economic and public welfare. The institutional problem in water resources administration in Congo may be helped by adopting one of the three models proposed in this thesis. The first model will be the alternative of organizing water institutions by level of government. The second alternative will organize water institutions on the basis of resource geometry. While the third will be a mixed institutional model between the two systems above. If these models are adopted, successful social and economic development. 1996 Thesis-Reproduction (electronic) text http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191328 222028884 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
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language en
sources NDLTD
description Adequate Water Resources Administration in Congo is a major concern for its government and its people. Water resources administration is a dilemma for government throughout the world, and Congo is no exception. An assessment of water resources administration practices in Congo today reveals several inadequacies attributable to deficiencies in the framework for decision making in the use and allocation of water resources. Actually, the entire field of water resources administration is dominated by one level the national government. In Congo, there is no water law to guide water development. It is known today that the administration of water resources in Congo is notorious for its inability to provide for the public welfare, partly because the structure of decision making is not conducive to an accurate definition of the public interest. There are no specific water organizations at the local level to represent water users and provide the delivery of essential water services, whereas this is the area which is critical to the enhancement of economic and public welfare. The institutional problem in water resources administration in Congo may be helped by adopting one of the three models proposed in this thesis. The first model will be the alternative of organizing water institutions by level of government. The second alternative will organize water institutions on the basis of resource geometry. While the third will be a mixed institutional model between the two systems above. If these models are adopted, successful social and economic development.
author2 Ince, Simon
author_facet Ince, Simon
Boubeka, Jacques.
author Boubeka, Jacques.
spellingShingle Boubeka, Jacques.
An institutional model of water resources administration in Congo
author_sort Boubeka, Jacques.
title An institutional model of water resources administration in Congo
title_short An institutional model of water resources administration in Congo
title_full An institutional model of water resources administration in Congo
title_fullStr An institutional model of water resources administration in Congo
title_full_unstemmed An institutional model of water resources administration in Congo
title_sort institutional model of water resources administration in congo
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 1996
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/191328
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