Determinants of Performance of Drinking-Water Community Organizations
Fecha de publicación
02-2010Autor
Environment for Development
Resources for the Future, Washington, DC (EUA)
Madrigal, R
Alpízar, F
Schluter, A
Tipo
Artículo
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemDescripción
Incluye 49 referencias bibliográficas.
Resumen
This paper presents an institutional analysis of the underlying factors affecting the performance of drinking-water community organizations in rural areas of Costa Rica. These organizations provide water to more than 60 percent of the total rural population. There is, however, a great disparity in their performance. This research tries to understand how a complex configuration of geophysical characteristics of watersheds and infrastructure as well as governance and socioeconomic attributes of local users affects three key dimensions of performance in rural communities: financial health, infrastructure condition, and user satisfaction. Using a qualitative approach and matching techniques to ensure comparability, the paper analyzes four communities in depth. The main results highlight the relevance of a demand-driven approach, coupled with local accountability, working rules for tariff collection and infrastructure maintenance, and appropriate support from the government as the main conditions that promote higher levels of performance
Palabras clave
Editor
Environment for Development
Es parte de
Discussion paper series (EfD);
URI (Enlace permanente para citar o compartir este ítem)
https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/10758Colecciones
- Publicaciones y documentos [3648]