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Lesotho Highlands Water Project : Communication Practices for Governance and Sustainability Improvement

ACCOUNTABILITY ACCOUNTING ADJUDICATION AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AGRICULTURE ANTI-CORRUPTION ANTICORRUPTION ANTICORRUPTION POLICIES ANTICORRUPTION POLICY ANTICORRUPTION REFORMS ASSETS AUDITING AUDITS BIDDING BRIBE BRIBERY BRIBES CIVIL SOCIETY CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATION CLIMATE CHANGE CLINICS COMMON PROPERTY COMMUNITIES COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT COMPLAINTS CONFIDENCE CONFLICTS OF INTEREST CORRUPT CORRUPT PRACTICES CORRUPTION CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS CORRUPTION PERCEPTIONS INDEX CPI CRIME DEBT DECENTRALIZATION DECENTRALIZATION PROCESS DECISION MAKING DECLARATION OF ASSETS DEMAND CURVES DESCRIPTION DWELLINGS ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC STABILITY EIB ELECTRICITY DEMAND ELECTRICITY GENERATION EMPLOYMENT ENGINEERS ENVIRONMENTAL ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT ETHICS EXPENDITURES FINANCIAL RISK FISH FISHERIES FORESTRY FRAUD GOOD GOVERNANCE GOVERNANCE REFORM GOVERNANCE REFORMS GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES HEALTH CARE HOUSEHOLDS HOUSING HUMAN RIGHTS IMPROVED COMMUNICATION INITIATIVE INTEGRITY INVESTIGATION JAIL LAND RESOURCES LANDS LAWS LEGAL FRAMEWORK LEGISLATION LIABILITY LIABILITY MANAGEMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENT MEDIA MINISTER MINISTERS MULTINATIONAL NATURAL RESOURCES PERFORMANCE INDICATORS POLICES POVERTY REDUCTION PROSECUTION PROSECUTORS PUBLIC INFORMATION PUBLIC OFFICIAL PUBLIC PARTICIPATION RESETTLEMENT RESOURCE MANAGEMENT RISK MANAGEMENT ROADS RULE OF LAW RURAL DEVELOPMENT SAFETY SAVINGS SOIL CONSERVATION STANDARDS OF LIVING STREAMS SUBSIDIARY SUPERVISION SUSTAINABILITY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUSTAINABLE MANAGEMENT TRADEOFFS TRADITIONAL HOUSING TRANSBOUNDARY RIVER BASINS TRANSPARENCY TRIALS TRUST FUNDS URBAN POPULATION VILLAGES WATER PRICES WATER RESOURCES WATER SUPPLY
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World Bank
Africa | Sub-Saharan Africa | Southern Africa | Lesotho
2012-03-19T09:35:22Z | 2012-04-04T07:44:00Z | 2012-03-19T09:35:22Z | 2012-04-04T07:44:00Z | 2010

The past decade has witnessed major shift thinking about water, including how water infrastructure development strategies can help advance sustainable development and the global fight against poverty. This reflects, in part, greater attention now being paid to governance reforms promoting integrated water resource management (IWRM), the efficient and wise use of water, and expanding access to water and energy services. In addition, the increased emphasis on developing and implementing anti-corruption strategies increases confidence that water infrastructure can be developed efficiently and equitably. There is also growing appreciation of the strong linkages between water, environment and energy security and climate change - impacting on decisions about the development and management of water infrastructure, especially in water-stressed regions, and of the central role that public, private sector and civil society partnerships can play in encouraging innovation, tackling challenges, promoting transparency and accountability and creating synergy. Communication is the thread that links these concerns and underpins achievements in sustainability and governance reform in water. Not only to ensure that up-front strategic assessments mobilize all viable options to meet the challenges unique to each situation, but also to better integrate governance and anti-corruption reforms and sustainability into all stages of planning and the project cycle of infrastructure. Wider acceptance of multi-stakeholder dialogue is a trend which characterizes beneficial change. This LHWP is notable for its progressive learning approach as it moved through its implementation phases and is an example of the shift s that are occurring globally in approaches to dam planning and management as they have become more inclusive. It is also a key example of the critical importance of political will in tackling corruption in a large water infrastructure project.

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