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  • 1
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Washington, DC :World Bank,
    UID:
    almafu_9958078498802883
    Umfang: ix, 84 pages : , illustrations, maps ; , 25 cm.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-280-08626-2 , 9786610086269 , 0-585-48595-X
    Serie: World Bank working paper ; no. 20
    Anmerkung: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Intro -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- Abstract -- Acknowledgments -- Acronyms -- Main Issues -- Recommendations -- Recommendations for Immediate Action -- Recommendations for Additional Studies -- 1. HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis Globally -- 2. HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis in Eastern Europe and Central Asia -- 3. The Bank's Role on HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis in Central Asia -- 4. Country Profile: Kazakhstan -- HIV/AIDS Epidemiological Profile -- Tuberculosis Epidemiological Profile -- 5. Country Profile: Kyrgyz Republic -- HIV/AIDS Epidemiological Profile -- Tuberculosis Epidemiological Profile -- 6. Country Profile: Tajikistan -- HIV/AIDS Epidemiological Profile -- Tuberculosis Epidemiological Profile -- 7. Country Profile: Turkmenistan -- HIV/AIDS Epidemiological Profile -- Tuberculosis Epidemiological Profile -- 8. Country Profile: Uzbekistan -- HIV/AIDS Epidemiological Profile -- Tuberculosis Epidemiological Profile -- 9. Conclusion -- References -- TABLES -- Table 1 Rate of Growth of HIV Epidemic in Central Asia -- Table 2 The HIV/AIDS Epidemic in Central Asia -- Table 3 Newly Diagnosed HIV Infections in Central Asia -- Table 4 TB Case Notification Rates (%) in Central Asia -- Table 5 Population Coverage with DOTS -- Table 6 Treatment Success -- Table 7 HIV/AIDS and TB Worldwide in 2000 -- Table 8 HIV/AIDS in Kazakhstan -- Table 9 Prison Populations, Facilities, and HIV Prevalence in Kazakhstan -- Table 10 Tuberculosis Rates, Kazakhstan -- Table 11 Tuberculosis in Prisons, Kazakhstan -- Table 12 TB Prevalence Rates by Oblast -- Table 13 Multiple-Drug Resistant Tuberculosis Surveillance (%), Kazakhstan -- Table 14 TB Service Provision, Kazakhstan -- Table 15 HIV/AIDS, Kyrgyz Republic -- Table 16 Tuberculosis Rates, Krygyz -- Table 17 TB in Prisons in the Kyrgyz Republic -- Table 18 Reported TB cases, Kyrgyz Republic. , Table 19 TB Services in the Kyrgyz Republic -- Table 20 Partner Activities, Kyrgyz Republic -- Table 21 Newly-diagnosed HIV Infections, Tajikistan -- Table 22 Tuberculosis in Tajikistan -- Table 23 TB Reporting Rate in Tajik Oblasts -- Table 24 Partner Activity on TB Prevention and Control in Tajikistan -- Table 25 Reported Tuberculosis Incidence and Mortality Rates in Turkmenistan -- Table 26 TB in Turkmen Regions -- Table 27 TB Treatment Success Rates, Dashoguz DOTS Pilot Project -- Table 28 HIV/AIDS in Uzbekistan -- Table 29 Tuberculosis Detection, Cases, Incidence, and Mortality in Uzbekistan -- Table 30 Multiple Drug Resistant TB (%) in Uzbekistan -- Table 31 Success Rates for TB Treatment, Karakalpakstan DOTS Pilot Area -- Table 32 Treatment Outcomes for New Smear-Positive Cases Treated Under DOTS in Uzbekistan -- Table 33 NGO and Partner Activity on TB in Uzbekistan -- FIGURES -- Figure 1 Standardized TB Death Rates in Central Asia 1991-2000 -- Figure 2 TB Notification Rate (All Cases) in the Eastern Europe and Central Asia Region, 1980-2000 -- Figure 3 HIV: New Cases in Kazakhstan -- Figure 4 HIV: New Cases in Kyrgyz Republic -- Figure 5 HIV: New Cases in Tajikistan -- Figure 6 HIV: New Cases in Uzbekistan. , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-5687-9
    Sprache: Englisch
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 2
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Washington, DC :World Bank,
    UID:
    almafu_9958066456202883
    Umfang: xxiv, 245 pages : , illustrations ; , 24 cm.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-280-08501-0 , 9786610085019 , 0-8213-5681-X
    Serie: World Bank regional and sectoral studies
    Anmerkung: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Intro -- Contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations and Acronyms -- Executive Summary -- Understanding the Labor Market Context and Developments -- Making Reforms Work in Public Training -- Opening Markets for Nongovernment Training Institutions -- Recognizing Formal Sector Enterprises as Trainers -- Building Skills for the Informal Economy -- Promoting Training Reforms with Financing -- Moving Forward with Reforms -- Note -- 1. Introduction and Background -- Introduction -- The Rationale for Training -- Importance of Training in Sub-Saharan Africa Today -- Issues Surrounding TVET -- Highlights of Developments in the 1990s -- International Assistance for Skills Development -- Highlights of the Literature -- Modeling Training Decisions -- Questions of Particular Relevance to Sub-Saharan Africa -- The Africa Regional Review of Skills Development -- Notes -- 2. Labor Market Context and Developments -- Introduction -- Income and Poverty -- Labor Supply -- Labor Demand -- The Informal Sector -- Labor Market Information -- Notes -- 3. Making Reforms Work In Public Training -- Introduction -- An Assessment of State-Sponsored Training -- Making Reforms Work -- Priorities and Policy Issues -- 4. Opening Markets for Nongovernment Training Institutions -- Introduction -- Scope and Characteristics of Nongovernment Training -- Financing and Costs -- Effectiveness -- Regulation of Nongovernment Training Providers -- Issues -- Notes -- 5. Recognizing Formal-Sector Enterprises as Trainers -- Introduction -- Background -- Importance of Enterprise-Based Training -- Pattern and Determinants of Enterprise-Based Training -- Benefits of Enterprise-Based Training -- Recruitment Practices -- Types of Training -- Public-Private Partnerships -- Collective Support Services -- Coping with HIV/AIDS -- Notes. , 6. Building Skills for the Informal Economy -- Introduction -- Traditional Apprenticeship Training -- Initiatives to Support Training Markets -- Policies -- Training Strategies for the Informal Sector -- Toward a Strategy to Improve Traditional Apprenticeship Training -- Issues -- Role of External Agencies -- Notes -- 7. Promoting Reforms with Training Finance -- Introduction -- Resource Mobilization -- Sale of Goods and Services -- Allocation Mechanisms -- Notes -- 8. Moving Forward with Reforms -- The Assessment -- Government's Role -- Role of International Partners -- A Research Agenda -- Appendixes -- Guide to Appendixes -- A. Mali and Senegal: Rationale for Private Provision of Technical-Vocational Education -- B. Mali: Private Technical-Vocational Training- Main Findings -- C. Senegal: Private TVE-Main Findings -- D. Benin: BAA-Improving Traditional Apprenticeship Training -- E. Cameroon: APME-Micro Enterprise Support and Promotion Program -- F. Cameroon: GIPA-One Association's Approach to Improving Traditional Apprenticeship Training -- G. Kenya: Jua Kali Project: Micro and Small Enterprise Training and Technology -- H. Kenya: SITE Project: Improving Traditional Apprenticeship Training -- I. Senegal: FEDNAPH-A Trade Association Providing Skills Training -- J. Tanzania: VETA/GTZ Project: Pilot Programs for Informal Sector Training -- K. Uganda: UNIDO/DANIDA/JICA Project: Master Craftspersons Training -- L. Zimbabwe: ISTARN-Traditional Apprenticeship Program -- M. Training Funds in Selected Sub-Saharan African Countries -- Principal Sources -- References and Selected Bibliography -- Tables -- 1.1 Distribution of Country and Case Studies -- 2.1 African Firms That Ranked the AIDS Epidemic as Having a Moderate or Major Impact on the Costs of Running Their Businesses -- 2.2 Labor Force Participation Rates, by Gender, 1980 and 1997. , 2.3 Benin: Time Use, by Women and Men -- 2.4 Adult Literacy Rates, Selected African Countries, 1985 and 1995 -- 2.5 Gross Enrollment Rates in Africa, 1960-97 -- 2.6 Education Levels of Household Heads, Selected African Countries, 1993-97 -- 2.7 Public Sector Wage-Employment, Selected African Countries, 1993-99 -- 3.1 Secondary Enrollments in Technical-Vocational Subjects -- 4.1 Obstacles to Nongovernment Technical-Vocational Training and Solutions -- 4.2 Annual Salaries of Public and Nongovernment TVE Instructors in CFA Francs, Mali and Senegal -- 4.3 Regulatory Frameworks for Nongovernment Technical-Vocational Training, Mali and Senegal -- 5.1 Determinants of Enterprise Efficiency (percentage increase in value added) -- 6.1 Training Needs in the Informal Sector -- 6.2 Advantages and Disadvantages of Traditional Apprenticeship as a Means of Skills Development -- 7.1 Revenue-Generating Payroll Taxes in Sub-Saharan Africa -- 7.2 Tanzania: Sources of Incomes and Training Costs, Selected Church-Owned Training Centers -- 7.3 Mechanisms for Funding Diversification: Advantages and Risks -- 7.4 Income Sources of National Training Funds, Selected Sub-Saharan African Countries -- 7.5 Key Conditions for Training Fund Success -- 7.6 National Levy-Grant Schemes in Selected Sub-Saharan African Countries -- 7.7 Weaknesses Common to Levy-Grant Schemes -- 7.8 Strengths and Weaknesses of Enterprise Training Schemes -- 8.1 Strengths and Weaknesses by Type of Training Provider -- Figures -- 1.1 World Bank Lending for TVET, Total and Africa Region -- 1.2 TVET Lending as a Percentage of Total Education Lending -- 1.3 World Bank Education and Training Projects with Training Investments -- 1.4 Studies Included in the Review -- 2.1. Sub-Saharan Africa: Estimated Proportions of Formal and Informal Sector Employment. , 2.2. Labor Force Structure, by Major Economic Sector, Selected African Countries, 1997 -- 2.3. Informal Sector Employment as a Share of Nonagricultural Employment, Selected African Countries (1990s) -- 2.4. Structure of the Urban Informal Sector, Selected Francophone Countries, 1980s/1990s -- 2.5. Steps in the Training Process -- 3.1 The Range of Public Training Provision by Ownership -- 3.2a Relevance -- 3.2b Quality (Effectiveness) -- 3.2c Internal Efficiency -- 4.1 Diversity in Nongovernment Institution-Based Training -- 4.2 Tanzania: Vocational Training Places by Ownership -- 4.3 Zambia: Training Institutions by Ownership -- 4.4 Costs per Trainee, Nonpublic and Public TVE Institutions in CFA Francs -- 4.5 Mali: Examination Results, Nonpublic and National Totals, by Type of Diploma (1999-2000) -- 4.6 Senegal: Success Rates for State Diplomas, 2000 -- 4.7 Zambia: Examination Passes in Nonpublic Institutions by Type of Examination, 1998-2001 -- 4.8 Zambia: Training Institutions by Type Ranked by Level of Standards, 2001 -- 5.1 Incidence of Formal Training by Industry: Kenya, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, 1995 -- 5.2 Incidence of Informal Training by Industry: Kenya, Zambia, and Zimbabwe, 1995 -- 5.3 International Comparison of Incidence of Informal and Formal Training: Selected Countries -- 5.4 African Enterprises Providing Informal Training by Firm Size, 1995 -- 5.5 African Enterprises Providing Formal Training by Firm Size, 1995 -- 5.6 Percentage of African Firms Providing Formal Training by Ownership, 1995 -- 5.7 Percentage of African Firms Providing Informal Training by Ownership, 1995 -- 5.8 Informal and External Training by Exporting and Nonexporting Firms -- 5.9 Workers Receiving Training by Type and Job Category: Kenya and Zimbabwe, 1995 -- Boxes -- 2.1 Cameroon: Pathways to Entrepreneurship in the Informal Sector. , 2.2 Constraints on Informal Sector Enterprises -- 2.3 Namibia: Using Labor Market Information for Flexible Training Delivery -- 3.1 Kenya: Evaluation of Public TVET -- 3.2 CONFEMEN Conference on TVET in Bamako, 1998 -- 3.3 Employer-Owned and -Managed Training in Brazil -- 3.4 Zambia: Granting Autonomy to Public Training Institutions -- 3.5 Plans for the Ghanaian National Qualifications Framework -- 4.1 Forms of Regulation -- 4.2 Zambia: Playing Field Slanted against Nongovernment Providers -- 6.1 Senegal: Views on the Position of an Apprentice -- 6.2 The Role of Informal Sector Associations -- 6.3 Main Findings from Study on Literacy for Livelihood Skills -- 6.4 Training Follow-Up in Ghana -- 6.5 Role of Government in Informal Sector Training -- 7.1 Zambia: A Tale of Two Community-Based Trade Schools and Their Fee Policies -- 7.2 Senegal: Introduction of Extra Courses on a Fee-Paying Basis -- 7.3 Togo: Income Mobilization by Renting Institutional Premises -- 7.4 Zambia: Traditional Budgeting -- 7.5 South Africa: Normative Financing Experiment with Technical Colleges -- 7.6 Mauritius: Vouchers for Small Enterprise Training -- 7.7 Malawi: Apprenticeship Allowances. , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-5680-1
    Sprache: Englisch
    Fachgebiete: Wirtschaftswissenschaften
    RVK:
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  • 3
    UID:
    almafu_9958096941402883
    Umfang: xxviii, 89 pages : , illustrations ; , 28 cm.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-281-78748-5 , 9786611787486 , 0-8213-7636-5
    Serie: World Bank e-Library.
    Inhalt: The Independent Evaluation Group (IEG) assessed the effectiveness of Bank support for decentralization between fiscal 1990 and 2007 in 20 countries, seeking to inform the design and implementation of future support. Given the difficulties of measuring the results of decentralization, the evaluation used intermediate outcome indicators-such as strengthened legal and regulatory frameworks for intergovernmental relations, improved administrative capacity, and increased accountability of sub national governments and functionaries to higher levels of government and to citizens-to assess the results
    Anmerkung: Description based upon print version of record. , Contents; Abbreviations; Acknowledgments; Foreword; Glossary; Executive Summary; Figure ES.1 Evaluation Framework for Assessing Results of Bank Support for Decentralization; Management Response; Chairperson's Summary: Committee on Development Effectiveness (CODE); 1 Background and Objectives; Box 1.1 What Is Decentralization?; Box 1.2 Identifying World Bank Support for Decentralization Poses Challenges; Box 1.3 Bank Strategies Reflect Multiple Perspectives on Decentralization; Figure 1.1 Evaluation Framework for Assessing Results of Bank Support for Decentralization , Table 1.1 Typology of Countries Where Bank Support for Decentralization Was Reviewed in DepthFigure 1.2 Bank Support for Decentralization to 20 Countries, Fiscal 1990-2007; 2 The Quality of Bank Support; Table 2.1 Timeliness of ESW in 20 Sample Countries; Box 2.1 Good Practice ESW in Bolivia; Box 2.2 An Incomplete Understanding Reduces Effectiveness of Support; Box 2.3 CDD and Local Governments in the Philippines; Box 2.4 Development Partner Views on World Bank Decentralization Performance; 3 Bank Support for Decentralization Frameworks and Subnational Government Capacity , Table 3.1 Assessing Results of Bank Support for Strengthened Intergovernmental RelationsBox 3.1 Good Practice in Russia; Box 3.2 Strengthening the Role of Local Governments; Figure 3.1 Distribution of State and Local Revenue Sources; Figure 3.2 Trends in Fiscal Deficits in Selected Indian States; Box 3.3 Analytic Support to South Africa; Table 3.2 Assessing Results for Enhanced Administrative Capacity and Accountability; Box 3.4 Appointment of Chief Accounting Officers in Uganda; Table 3.3 Contribution of Bank Support for Decentralization Frameworks , 4 Bank Support for Decentralization in Education Services: A Sector ExampleTable 4.1 Assessing Results in the Education Sector; Box 4.1 Aligning Fiscal Transfers with Local Sectoral Priorities; Box 4.2 Gender and Capacity Building at the Local Level; Table 4.2 School Autonomy and Accountability in Three Pilot Regions in Russia Supported by the Bank; 5 Findings and Recommendations; Table 5.1 Support for Decentralization Needs to Be Country Specific; Table 5.2 Better Quality of Bank Support Associated with Better Results; Appendixes; Endnotes; Bibliography , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-7635-7
    Sprache: Englisch
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 4
    UID:
    almafu_9958095819302883
    Umfang: lxxx, 144 pages : , illustrations ; , 27 cm.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-281-11326-3 , 9786611113261 , 0-8213-7351-X
    Serie: World Bank e-Library.
    Inhalt: Sub-Saharan Africa is a critical development priority-it has some of the world's poorest countries and during the past two decades the number of poor in the Region has doubled, to 300 million-more than 40 percent of the Region's population. Africa remains behind on most of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and is unlikely to reach them by 2015. With some of the world's poorest countries, Africa is a development priority for the donor community. A major drag on Africa's development is the underperformance of the critical agriculture sector, which has been neglected both by donors and government
    Anmerkung: Description based upon print version of record. , Contents; Abbreviations; Acknowledgments; Foreword; Avant propos; Prefácio; Preface; Préface; Nota Preliminar; Executive Summary; Synthèse; Resumo Executivo; Management Response; Réponse de la direction; A Resposta da Administração; Chairperson's Summary: Committee on Development Effectiveness (CODE); Rapport de synthèse du Président : Comité pour l'efficacité du développement (CODE); Resumo do Presidente:Comissão sobre a Eficácia do Desenvolvimento (COED); Evaluation Snapshot in Selected Languages; 1 Introduction; 2 African Agriculture and the Bank , Figure 2.1 Changes in Cereal Production Produced by Changes in Area and Yield, 1961-2001 Box 2.1 Constraints to Development of Access to Credit and Rural Finance in Africa; 3 Bank Support for Agriculture and Portfolio Performance; Figure 3.1 Sectoral Distribution of Investment Lending in Africa, Fiscal 1991-2006; Box 3.1 Bank's Coding System and Inadequate Reflection of Important Agricultural Activities; Figure 3.2 Outcome and Sustainability Ratings; Figure 3.3 Performance of Bank Projects with Greater than 50 Percent Agricultural Component; 4 Key Factors of Performance , Box 4.1 Weak Political Commitment Has Been a Factor in Performance Box 4.2 The History and Challenges of National Research Capacity in Africa; 5 The Bank's Contribution-A Thematic Assessment; Box 5.1 Bank Support for Fadama Project I in Nigeria: Achievements Constrained by Lack of a Multifaceted Approach; Figure 5.1 Production of Maize and Cassava in Six Drought-Affected Countries of Southern Africa; Box 5.2 Cassava: A Missed Opportunity for the Bank to Contribute to Food Security; Box 5.3 New Uganda Extension System Improves Efficiency But Faces Challenges , Box 5.4 Zimbabwe Pilot for Land Reform Fails to Take Off Box 5.5 Agricultural Market Reform in Africa: The Expectations; Box 5.6 Negative Impacts of Policy Sequencing on Traditional Export Crop Sectors in Cameroon; 6 Findings and Recommendations; Appendixes; Endnotes; References , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-7350-1
    Sprache: Englisch
    Fachgebiete: Wirtschaftswissenschaften
    RVK:
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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  • 5
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Washington, D.C. :World Bank,
    UID:
    almafu_9958088574702883
    Umfang: xx, 518 pages : , illustrations ; , 25 cm.
    ISBN: 92-2-113835-6 , 1-280-08864-8 , 9786610088645 , 0-585-44945-7
    Serie: World Bank e-Library.
    Inhalt: Comprises 25 contributions on strategies and public policies on microinsurance-schemes. Focuses on reinsurance as a mechanism for enlarging the risk pool as well as the coverage of larger population groups, exemplified by experiences made in a pilot project carried out in the Philippines. Describes the Social Re Data Template software used to manage insurance information and to calculate the reinsurance premium.
    Anmerkung: Description based upon print version of record. , ""Cover""; ""Contents""; ""Foreword""; ""Acknowledgments""; ""Abbreviations and Acronyms""; ""Introduction""; ""DEFINITION OF COMMUNITY-BASED HEALTH FINANCING""; ""OBJECTIVE AND SCOPE OF THIS VOLUME""; ""TARGET AUDIENCE""; ""BACKGROUND TO RESEARCH""; ""ROADMAP FOR VOLUME""; ""Part 1 Development Challenges in Health Care Financing""; ""Part 2 Insurance, Microinsurance, and Reinsurance""; ""Part 3 Implementation Issues""; ""Part 4 Toward a Reinsurance Pilot in the Philippines""; ""CONCLUSIONS""; ""PART 1 Development Challenges in Health Care Financing "" , ""1 Rich-Poor Differences in Health Care Financing""""ACHIEVING FINANCIAL PROTECTION AGAINST THE COST OF ILLNESS""; ""EXCLUSION OF LOW-INCOME RURAL POPULATIONS AND INFORMAL WORKERS""; ""UNDERSTANDING THE ORIGINS OF RICH-POOR DIFFERENCES IN HEALTH CARE FINANCING""; ""FIGURE 1.1 Spending and Risk-Sharing Arrangements""; ""FIGURE 1.2 Determinants of Outcome: Health and Financial Protection""; ""KEY OBSTACLES IN EXTENDING FINANCIAL PROTECTION THROUGH FORMAL ARRANGEMENTS""; ""Problems in Mobilizing Financial Resources at Low-Income Levels""; ""BOX 1.1 FLOW OF FUNDS THROUGH THE HEALTH SYSTEM"" , ""FIGURE 1.3 Low-Income Countries Have Weak Capacity to Raise Revenues""""Problems in Revenue Pooling at Low-Income Levels""; ""FIGURE 1.4 Revenue Pooling Equalizes Inequities""; ""Problems in Allocating Resources and Rationing Care at Low-Income Levels""; ""BOX 1.2 DIFFERENT APPROACHES TO SHARING RISKS""; ""FIGURE 1.5 Cost-Risk Concentration Curve""; ""BOX 1.3 WHAT TO BUY USING PUBLIC FUNDS, IN WHICH FORM, HOW MUCH TO BUY, AND HOW TO PAY FOR IT?""; ""NOTE""; ""REFERENCES""; ""2 The Role of Communities in Combating Social Exclusion"" , ""ORIGINS OF SOCIAL EXCLUSION FROM FORMAL HEALTH CARE FINANCING""""Where Does Social Exclusion in the Health Sector Originate?""; ""FIGURE 2.1 Schematic Description: Interaction of Needs, Demand, and Supply""; ""FIGURE 2.2 Subsidizing Supply""; ""FIGURE 2.3 Subsidizing Demand""; ""FIGURE 2.4 Enhancing Overlap""; ""FIGURE 2.5 Pro-Rich Bias of Public Subsidies""; ""Historical Roots""; ""What Role Do Communities Play in Addressing Exclusion?""; ""ROLE OF COMMUNITIES IN PROVIDING FINANCIAL PROTECTION AGAINST ILLNESS""; ""A Lack of Clarity in the Definition of Community-Based Financing Schemes"" , ""Conceptual Underpinnings of Community-Based Action in Health Care Financing""""Links to Microfinance Organizations""; ""TABLE 2.1 Conceptual Underpinnings of Community-Financing Schemes""; ""Links to Social Capital""; ""Links to Mainstream Welfare Concepts, Public Finance, and Social and Health Policy""; ""RECENT EVIDENCE OF COMMUNITIES ROLE IN COMBATING SOCIAL EXCLUSION""; ""CONCLUSIONS""; ""NOTES""; ""REFERENCES""; ""PART 2 Insurance, Microinsurance, and Reinsurance""; ""3 Introduction to Insurance and Reinsurance Coverage""; ""WHAT DOES REINSURANCE DO?""; ""Capacity"" , ""Stabilization of Loss Experience"" , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 92-2-112711-7
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-5041-2
    Sprache: Englisch
    Schlagwort(e): Aufsatzsammlung
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 6
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Washington, DC :World Bank,
    UID:
    almafu_9958059433802883
    Umfang: xx, 156 pages : , illustrations, map ; , 23 cm.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-280-09081-2 , 9786610090815 , 1-4175-7628-6
    Serie: Directions in development
    Anmerkung: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph , Intro -- Table of Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- About the Authors -- Acronyms and Abbreviations -- Executive Summary -- 1. Introduction -- Main features of Mali -- Main features of the Office du Niger -- Physical resources -- Infrastructure and water management -- Governance and management of people and resources -- Production before the reforms -- Summary -- Notes -- 2. Reaching a Diagnosis, 1978-82 -- Mali's funding request to the World Bank -- The Segu multidonor meeting -- Deterioration of ON finances: The cost of Costes -- The outcomes of donor explorations -- Restructuring the rice market -- Donors and government narrowly escape stalemate -- Summary -- Notes -- 3. Reform Steps That Shifted the Power Balance, 1982-92 -- A pragmatic pilot at KL2 -- Encountering another set of constraints -- ARPON's policy of technical interventions and pragmatic support -- High-grade modernization, intensification, and innovative institutions -- The role of farmers -- Responses to the partial reforms: World Bank, KfW, and EDF -- Liberalization and protection of the domestic rice market -- Malian government-donor dialogue -- Results -- Summary -- Notes -- 4. Piecing Reforms into a Comprehensive Framework, 1993-96 -- A window of opportunity -- Agency restructuring and sector reforms -- Land-tenure consolidation -- Privatization of assets and activities -- Overhaul of the agricultural credit system -- Results -- Summary -- Notes -- 5. Monitoring Performance and Adjusting Institutions, 1996-2002 -- The development impact of ON reforms -- A chain reaction in institutions -- The ON's future: risks and challenges -- Summary -- Notes -- 6. Relevance of the ON Experience to Other Countries -- The political economy of the reform process at the ON -- The political economy of irrigation reforms -- Building support -- Implementation and consolidation. , User funding of O& -- M as normal practice -- Summary -- Notes -- Appendix A: Summaries of Major Official Documents -- Appendix A.1: Terms of Reference of the Government General Delegate in Charge of Office du Niger Reform -- Appendix A.2: Financing Reform of the Office du Niger -- Appendix A.3: Act No. 94-004 Reforming the Office du Niger -- Appendix A.4: Decree No. 94-142 on Office du Niger Organization and Operation -- Appendix A.5: Decree No. 96-188 on Land Administration and Management of Operation and Maintenance -- Appendix A.6: 2002-2004 Performance Contract -- Appendix A.7: Management of Staff Redundancy -- Notes -- Appendix B: Concepts and Institutional Options in Irrigation Reform -- Governance -- Institutional options -- Effects of reforms -- Private sector incentives in irrigation management -- Triggering and feeding "out-of-the-box" thinking -- Transparency and financial accountability -- Window of opportunity -- Notes -- Appendix C: Toward Political Feasibility: Five Country Histories -- Australia -- Indonesia -- Madagascar -- Mexico -- The Philippines -- Notes -- Appendix D: Office du Niger Area -- References -- Index. -- Boxes -- 1.1 Origin, features, and development of the inner delta of the Niger River -- 1.2 History of the Office du Niger from founding to first donor meeting -- 3.1 Walking backward into progress: From seed broadcasting to transplantation -- 4.1 Reaching consensus on paddy production costs -- 4.2 How farmers' representatives are elected -- 4.3 Small hulling machines make large mills obsolete -- 5.1 A farmer-leader investing in comanagement -- 6.1 From agency to user management in the American West -- Figures -- 1.1 Hydraulic units in the Office du Niger canal system -- 5.1 Producer responses to minimum and maximum hydraulic improvement -- 5.2 Dynamics of performance contract negotiations. , 5.3 Post-reform accountability of the ON -- Tables -- 1.1 Changes in farmer involvement in the Office du Niger irrigation scheme, 1978-82 and 1996-2003 -- 1.2 Changes in business processes in the Office du Niger irrigation scheme, 1978-82 and 1996-2003 -- 1.3. Land development in hectares, 1934-2002 -- 3.1 Adoption of transplanting, 1982-83-2001-02 -- 3.2 Wet season rice crops, 1982-93 -- 4.1 Devolution of assets and activities relinquished by the ON -- 4.2 Performance of the ON, 1992-93 through 1995-96 -- 4.3 Water fee collection and infrastructure maintenance (current terms), 1992-93 through 1995-96 -- 5.1 ON agronomic performance, 1995-96 through 2001-02 -- 5.2 Evolution of demographic and agronomic benchmarks, 1982-2002 -- 5.3 Household strategies related to farm size per person of working age -- 5.4 Nominal water fees over time, according to land development class and season -- 5.5 Fee collection and share used for maintenance, 1995-96 through 2000-01 -- 5.6 Sources and uses of funds by the ON, calendar year 2000. -- 5.7 Performance of the savings and loan associations, 1996-2001 -- 5.8 Typology of hydraulic hardware -- 6.1 Evolution of stakeholder positions between 1978-82 and 1993-96 -- 6.2 Timeline for switch from government to user funding of O& -- M -- A.1 Budget and funding of the reform unit, April 1993-March 1996 -- A.2 Cost and financing of severance allowances -- B.1 Institutions current in the management of multiuser schemes -- B.2 Private participation in water utilities and irrigation management -- C.1 Evolution of the area under command in the Philippines, 1964-99. , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-5942-8
    Sprache: Englisch
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 7
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Washington, D.C. :World Bank,
    UID:
    almafu_9958094683502883
    Umfang: xv, 184 pages : , illustrations (some color), maps (some color) ; , 28 cm.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-280-54256-X , 9786610542567 , 0-8213-6333-6
    Serie: Disaster risk management series ; no. 6
    Inhalt: These case studies complement the earlier groundbreaking work of Natural Disaster Hotspots: A Global Risk Analysis published in April 2005. Three case studies address specific hazards: landslides, storm surges and drought. An additional, three case studies address regional multi-hazard situations in Sri Lanka, the Tana River basin in Kenya, and the city of Caracas, Venezuela.
    Anmerkung: Description based upon print version of record. , Contents; Preface; Introduction; 1. Drought Disaster in Asia; Figures; 2. Global Landslides Risk Case Study; Tables; 3. Storm Surges in Coastal Areas; 4. Natural Disaster Risks in Sri Lanka: Mapping Hazards and Risk Hotspots; 5. Multihazard Risks in Caracas, República Bolivariana de Venezuela; 6. Reducing the Impacts of Floods through Early Warning and Preparedness: A Pilot Study for Kenya , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-6332-8
    Sprache: Englisch
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
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  • 8
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Washington, D.C. :World Bank,
    UID:
    almafu_9958102505102883
    Umfang: pages cm.
    ISBN: 0-8213-9491-6 , 1-299-19251-3
    Serie: World Bank e-Library.
    Inhalt: Many areas of the world are at risk from landslides and their consequences; rainfall-triggered landslides particularly affect developing countries in the tropics. Rapid urbanization and the associated growth of unauthorized and densely populated communities in hazardous locations, such as steep slopes, are powerful drivers in a cycle of disaster risk accumulation. Frequently, it is the most socioeconomically vulnerable who inhabit landslide-prone slopes-thus increasing their exposure to landslide hazards and often increasing the hazard itself. There is growing recognition that urban landslide
    Anmerkung: Description based upon print version of record. , Cover; CONTENTS; PREFACE; TABLES; P.1 Critical questions and decisions addressed in this book; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; ABOUT THE AUTHORS; ABBREVIATIONS; 1 FOUNDATIONS: REDUCING LANDSLIDE RISK IN COMMUNITIES; 1.1 Key chapter elements; 1.1.1 Coverage; 1.1.2 Documents; 1.1.3 Steps and outputs; 1.1.4 Community-based aspects; 1.2 Getting started; 1.2.1 Briefing note; FIGURES; 1.1 Global landslide risk; 1.2 MoSSaiC premises, vision, and foundations; 1.2.2 What is unique about MoSSaiC?; 1.1 The key teams and tasks in MoSSaiC; 1.2.3 Guiding principles; 1.2.4 Risks and challenges , 1.3 Disaster risk: context and concepts1.3.1 Global disaster risk; 1.3 Number of great natural catastrophes and associated economic losses worldwide, 1950-2010; 1.4 Normalized losses from U.S. Gulf and Atlantic hurricane damage, 1900-2005; 1.2 Categories of catastrophe; 1.5 Exposure and fatalities associated with rainfall-triggered landslides, by income class; 1.3.2 Disaster risk management; 1.6 Global rainfall-triggered landslide fatalities; 1.3 Disaster risk management components; 1.3.3 Recent influences on disaster risk management policy and implications for MoSSaiC , 1.7 Disaster risk management options1.8 Societal landslide risk in Hong Kong SAR, China; 1.9 International advocacy landscape for disaster risk reduction; 1.10 UN disaster response organizational framework; 1.4 Lessons learned from World Bank natural disaster projects; 1.11 Benefit-cost ratio for hurricane-proofing prevention measures for houses in Canaries and Patience, St. Lucia; 1.12 Mitigation benefit-cost ratio for wood frame building in Canaries, St. Lucia, with and without the effect of climate change; 1.13 Efficiency of risk management instruments and occurrence probability , 1.14 Evolution of social fund objectives and activities1.3.4 Landslide risk and other development policy issues; 1.15 Population growth and urbanization drivers of landslide risk; 1.4 MoSSaiC; 1.4.1 Overview; 1.5 Percentage of owner occupancy, unauthorized housing, and squatter housing by country income group, 1990; 1.4.2 MoSSaiC: The science basis; 1.6 The foundations of MoSSaiC; 1.16 MoSSaiC architecture-integrating science, communities, and evidence; 1.17 Housing stock can reflect community vulnerability; 1.4.3 MoSSaiC: The community basis , 1.18 Stakeholder connections in Guatemala City's precarious settlements, showing how money flows around, but not into, the settlements1.7 Coping mechanisms deployed by individual residents in vulnerable communities to reduce landslide risk; 1.19 Learning from community residents; 1.20 Effects of prompt and informed action; 1.8 Value of community engagement; 1.4.4 MoSSaiC: The evidence base; 1.4.5 MoSSaiC project components; 1.4.6 MoSSaiC pilots; 1.9 Basic MoSSaiC outputs and outcomes providing evidence for ex ante landslide mitigation , 1.10 Broad impacts of community-based landslide risk reduction program in St. Lucia and Dominica, 2005-10 , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-9456-8
    Sprache: Englisch
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 9
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Washington, D.C. :World Bank,
    UID:
    almafu_9958063832602883
    Umfang: pages cm.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 0-8213-9811-3
    Serie: Africa Development Forum
    Inhalt: This is the first book on land administration and reform in Sub-Saharan Africa, and is highly relevant to all developing countries around the world. It provides simple practical steps to turn the hugely controversial subject of ""land grabs"" into a development opportunity by improving land governance to reduce the risks of dispossessing poor landholders while ensuring mutually beneficial investors' deals. The book shows how Sub Saharan Africa can leverage its abundant and highly valuable natural resources to eradicate poverty by improving land governance through a ten point program to scale u
    Anmerkung: A copublication of the Agence Française de Développement and the World Bank. , Cover; Contents; Foreword; Acknowledgments; About the Author; Abbreviations; Overview; The Challenge; The Opportunities; The Key to Leveraging Land for Development: Scaling Up Reforms and Investments; Tables; 0.1 Key Elements of and Pathways to Scaling Up Land Administration in Sub-Saharan Africa; Who Does What to Scale Up?; 0.2 Scaling Up Land Administration: The Role of Key Players in Sub-Saharan Africa; Benefits of Scaling Up Comprehensive Reforms and Investments; Note; References; 1 Introduction; The Historical Context , Global Experiences and the Piloting of Innovations in Sub-Saharan AfricaReadiness to Scale Up to Meet Demand; 1.1 Number of Doing Business Reforms Making It Easier to Register Property, 2005-11; Boxes; 1.1 The Voluntary Guidelines on Governance of Tenure; Objectives and Structure of the Book; Note; References; 2 The Impact of Documenting Land Rights on Investment and Productivity; Experiences with Registration of Communal Land Rights; 2.1 Legalizing and Registering Communal Rights in Ghana, Mozambique, and Tanzania , 2.1 Unit Costs of Surveying Community Land Boundaries in Ghana, Mozambique, and Tanzania2.2 Legalizing and Registering Communal Rights in Mexico; Experience with Systematic Registration of Individual Land Rights in Sub-Saharan Africa; Impacts of Land Rights Documentation on Agricultural Investments and Productivity; Notes; References; 3 Land Reforms for Reducing Poverty in Rural and Urban Areas; Experiences with Redistributing Agricultural Land; 3.1 Redistributing Agricultural Land in Malawi and South Africa , 3.1 Impacts of Malawi's Pilot Community-Based Rural Land Development Project, 2005-09Experiences with Regularizing Land Tenure in Urban Informal Settlements; 3.2 Land Tenure Regularization Experiences in Kenya, Lesotho, and Tanzania; Reforming Land Rental Markets to Provide Land Access to the Poor and Promote Transformational Growth; Land Reforms and Interventions Promoting Gender Equity; 3.3 Government Intervention and Rental Markets in Ethiopia and Uganda; 3.4 Successful Land Reforms and Women's Land Rights in Ethiopia and Rwanda; Notes; References , 4 Land Administration for Good Governance and Conflict ManagementManaging Conflict by Building Competent and Impartial Institutions for Resolving Land Disputes; Strengthening Governance and Property Rights by Improving Land Acquisition Laws and Procedures; 4.1 Land Acquisition and Compensation in Ghana; Strengthening Management of Public Land and Reducing Corruption by Creating Inventories of Government Land; 4.2 Challenges and Opportunities for State Land Inventories to Improve Land Management in Ghana and Uganda , Grappling with Governance Issues Associated with Converting Rural to Urban Land Use , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-9810-5
    Sprache: Englisch
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 10
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Washington DC :World Bank :
    UID:
    almafu_9958068655002883
    Umfang: xxiv, 251 pages : , illustrations, maps ; , 26 cm.
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 0-8213-7541-5
    Serie: Development practice in education
    Inhalt: Progress in literacy and learning, especially through universal primary education, has done more to advance human conditions than perhaps any other policy. Our generation has the possibility of becoming the first generation ever to offer all children access to good quality basic education. But it will only happen if we have the political commitment -- at the country as well as at the international level -- to give priority to achieve this first in human history. And it will only happen if also those who cannot afford to pay school fees can benefit from a complete cycle of good quality primary
    Anmerkung: Description based upon print version of record. , Contents; Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; CHAPTER 1. RATIONALE, ISSUES, AND CONDITIONS FOR SUSTAINING THE ABOLITION OF SCHOOL FEES; TABLES; CHAPTER 2. FINANCING PRIMARY EDUCATION WITHIN A DECENTRALIZED SYSTEM: THE CASE OF ETHIOPIA; FIGURES; CHAPTER 3. FROM PILOT TO NATIONAL SCALE: GHANA'S EXPERIENCE WITH THE ABOLITION OF SCHOOL FEES; MAPS; BOX; CHAPTER 4. ABOLITION OF SCHOOL FEES AND LEVIES IN KENYA; CHAPTER 5. REVIEW OF THE PLANNING AND IMPLEMENTATION OF FREE PRIMARY EDUCATION IN MALAWI , CHAPTER 6. ABOLISHING FEES AND REDUCING THE COSTS OF PRIMARY SCHOOL: THE EXPERIENCE OF MOZAMBIQUEINDEX , English
    Weitere Ausg.: ISBN 0-8213-7540-7
    Sprache: Englisch
    Schlagwort(e): Fallstudiensammlung
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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