Media Dissemination of Road Sector Reforms
Over the past five years, the 'second liberalization' of Africa has liberalized the local media in turn. The explosion of media outlets and the diversity of their outreach provide excellent opportunities for the dissemination to, and owne...
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okr-10986-98782021-04-23T14:02:47Z Media Dissemination of Road Sector Reforms Mwale, Sam M. AIR BANK BROADCASTING CONCRETE COSTS CREEP DISCUSSION EDITORS FARES FUEL FUEL LEVIES FUEL TAXES GOVERNMENTS INCOME INFORMATION INITIATIVE INTEREST ITS MAIL MEDIA MEDIA ATTENTION POLICIES PRESS PRESS RELEASES PUBLIC OPINION PUBLIC SCRUTINY PUBLIC SERVICE VEHICLES PUBLIC TRANSPORT RADIO REFORM REPORTS RESEARCH RMI ROAD ROAD FUNDS ROAD HAZARDS ROAD MAINTENANCE ROAD MAINTENANCE INITIATIVE ROAD SECTOR ROAD TOLLS ROADS SERVICE STRATEGY TARIFFS TRANSPORT TRANSPORT POLICY TRANSPORT POLICY MAKERS TRAVEL TRAVEL TIMES VEHICLE VEHICLE OWNERS VEHICLES Over the past five years, the 'second liberalization' of Africa has liberalized the local media in turn. The explosion of media outlets and the diversity of their outreach provide excellent opportunities for the dissemination to, and ownership of development policies, programs, and projects by the stakeholders and beneficiaries. While the practice of participatory development in Africa is relatively new, the practice of using the media as a development tool, especially as a means of facilitating discussion, is even newer. Policymakers view exposing development programs and projects in the public domain via the media with some trepidation. This fear arises, not so much from a fear of public debate, as from the view that 'experts' already know all the answers, in the form of feasibility studies, technical and analytical reports, and participatory rural appraisals. 2012-08-13T09:46:35Z 2012-08-13T09:46:35Z 1998-12 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1998/12/12893577/media-dissemination-road-sector-reforms http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9878 English Africa Region Findings & Good Practice Infobriefs; No. 124 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Brief Publications & Research |
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Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English |
topic |
AIR BANK BROADCASTING CONCRETE COSTS CREEP DISCUSSION EDITORS FARES FUEL FUEL LEVIES FUEL TAXES GOVERNMENTS INCOME INFORMATION INITIATIVE INTEREST ITS MEDIA MEDIA ATTENTION POLICIES PRESS PRESS RELEASES PUBLIC OPINION PUBLIC SCRUTINY PUBLIC SERVICE VEHICLES PUBLIC TRANSPORT RADIO REFORM REPORTS RESEARCH RMI ROAD ROAD FUNDS ROAD HAZARDS ROAD MAINTENANCE ROAD MAINTENANCE INITIATIVE ROAD SECTOR ROAD TOLLS ROADS SERVICE STRATEGY TARIFFS TRANSPORT TRANSPORT POLICY TRANSPORT POLICY MAKERS TRAVEL TRAVEL TIMES VEHICLE VEHICLE OWNERS VEHICLES |
spellingShingle |
AIR BANK BROADCASTING CONCRETE COSTS CREEP DISCUSSION EDITORS FARES FUEL FUEL LEVIES FUEL TAXES GOVERNMENTS INCOME INFORMATION INITIATIVE INTEREST ITS MEDIA MEDIA ATTENTION POLICIES PRESS PRESS RELEASES PUBLIC OPINION PUBLIC SCRUTINY PUBLIC SERVICE VEHICLES PUBLIC TRANSPORT RADIO REFORM REPORTS RESEARCH RMI ROAD ROAD FUNDS ROAD HAZARDS ROAD MAINTENANCE ROAD MAINTENANCE INITIATIVE ROAD SECTOR ROAD TOLLS ROADS SERVICE STRATEGY TARIFFS TRANSPORT TRANSPORT POLICY TRANSPORT POLICY MAKERS TRAVEL TRAVEL TIMES VEHICLE VEHICLE OWNERS VEHICLES Mwale, Sam M. Media Dissemination of Road Sector Reforms |
relation |
Africa Region Findings & Good Practice Infobriefs; No. 124 |
description |
Over the past five years, the
'second liberalization' of Africa has liberalized
the local media in turn. The explosion of media outlets and
the diversity of their outreach provide excellent
opportunities for the dissemination to, and ownership of
development policies, programs, and projects by the
stakeholders and beneficiaries. While the practice of
participatory development in Africa is relatively new, the
practice of using the media as a development tool,
especially as a means of facilitating discussion, is even
newer. Policymakers view exposing development programs and
projects in the public domain via the media with some
trepidation. This fear arises, not so much from a fear of
public debate, as from the view that 'experts'
already know all the answers, in the form of feasibility
studies, technical and analytical reports, and participatory
rural appraisals. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Brief |
author |
Mwale, Sam M. |
author_facet |
Mwale, Sam M. |
author_sort |
Mwale, Sam M. |
title |
Media Dissemination of Road Sector Reforms |
title_short |
Media Dissemination of Road Sector Reforms |
title_full |
Media Dissemination of Road Sector Reforms |
title_fullStr |
Media Dissemination of Road Sector Reforms |
title_full_unstemmed |
Media Dissemination of Road Sector Reforms |
title_sort |
media dissemination of road sector reforms |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1998/12/12893577/media-dissemination-road-sector-reforms http://hdl.handle.net/10986/9878 |
_version_ |
1764410994750128128 |