Discovering the core stakeholders in the Nigerian urban water supply system

被引:0
|
作者
Kwasi Gyau Baffour Awuah
Charles Kyom Bijimi
机构
[1] University of Salford,School of Science, Engineering & Environment (SSEE)
来源
Sustainable Water Resources Management | 2024年 / 10卷
关键词
Nigeria; Stakeholder; Sustainable; Urban; Water supply;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Core stakeholders’ engagement and involvement are now a sine qua non of resources administration and management. This followed the emergence of pluralistic forms of governance, which call for greater democracy and emphasises transparency, accountability, inclusivity, and engagement as credentials for sustainable resource management. Nigeria has embraced these pluralistic forms of governance in its water sector as part of efforts to promote sustainable water resource management. However, to successfully engage and involve core stakeholders in the face of myriad urban water supply challenges and achieve optimal outcomes remain a challenge as it is unclear who the core stakeholders are. This study examines Nigerian’s urban water supply system and the extent of the interests of the stakeholders to identify the core stakeholders as an input towards facilitating sustainable water resources management in the country based on a survey of urban water supply experts in the country. The study finds 15 core or primary stakeholders out of 25 stakeholders and note that their core stakeholder status is linked to their direct involvement or connection with the water supply system and its successful running, which is rooted in them being customers or investors or regulators and enforcers of regulation, funders, supervisors, and the need to respect community and social interests. The study concludes that whilst the engagement of all stakeholders is good for sustainable water resources management in Nigeria, engagement, and involvement of the 15 core stakeholders is paramount to the sustainable and successful operations of the country’s urban water supply system.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Understanding intra-urban inequality in networked water supply in Wa, Ghana
    Lazarus Jambadu
    Alfred Dongzagla
    Ishmael Kabange
    GeoJournal, 2023, 88 : 841 - 857
  • [22] Water supply, urban drainage and waste water treatment in the Orava region
    Haloun, Radovan
    Integrated Urban Water Resources Management, 2006, : 79 - 90
  • [23] Water and production reflections on the water supply to urban workshops in roman times
    Elena H. Sánchez López
    Water History, 2023, 15 (1) : 29 - 44
  • [24] Optimal design of urban water supply pipe networks
    Sarbu, Ioan
    Ostafe, Gabriel
    URBAN WATER JOURNAL, 2016, 13 (05) : 521 - 535
  • [25] The Relationship and Regression Analysis of Urban Water Supply and Temperature
    Shi, Henghua
    Weng, Wenguo
    Zhai, Zhengang
    Li, Yuanyuan
    ADVANCES IN CIVIL ENGINEERING II, PTS 1-4, 2013, 256-259 : 2420 - +
  • [26] The impact of chemotherapy, education and community water supply on schistosomiasis control in a Southwestern Nigerian village
    Oyeyemi, Oyetunde
    Olowookere, Damilola
    Ezekiel, Chibundu
    Oso, Gbenga
    Odaibo, Alexander
    INFECTION DISEASE & HEALTH, 2018, 23 (02) : 121 - 123
  • [27] Non-conventional public-private partnerships for water supply to urban slums
    Hossain, Khandker Zakir
    Ahmed, Shafiul Azam
    URBAN WATER JOURNAL, 2015, 12 (07) : 570 - 580
  • [28] System analysis model for urban core competitiveness
    Chen, Hong-Mei
    Wang, Ying
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2006 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MANAGEMENT SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2006, : 112 - 116
  • [29] A Hybrid Meta-Heuristic for a Bi-Objective Stochastic Optimization of Urban Water Supply System
    Dogani, Azadeh
    Dourandish, Arash
    Ghorbani, Mohammad
    Shahbazbegian, Mohammad Reza
    IEEE ACCESS, 2020, 8 : 135829 - 135843
  • [30] Mitigating water supply system vulnerabilities
    Baecher, Gregory B.
    Protection of Civilian Infrastructure from Acts of Terrorism, 2006, : 149 - 157