Consumers Count : How Water and Sanitation Utilities Can Become More Accountable to Their Users
This note presents tools that can help make service providers more accountable to the people they serve. The voice of users is often muted in water utilities. One consequence is that utilities do not take account of users' priorities and prefe...
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2012
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/06/9677440/consumers-count-water-sanitation-utilities-can-more-accountable-users http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11763 |
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okr-10986-117632021-04-23T14:02:57Z Consumers Count : How Water and Sanitation Utilities Can Become More Accountable to Their Users Muller, Mike Simpson, Robin Ginnekan, Meike van ACCESS TO INFORMATION ACCOUNTABILITY ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES CIVIL SOCIETY COMPLAINT CONFIDENCE CUSTOMER SERVICE DAY-TO-DAY OPERATIONS DECISION MAKING DRAINS FINANCIAL CONSTRAINTS HOUSEHOLD SANITATION INFORMATION PROVISION INFORMATION SHARING LEADERSHIP LEGAL FRAMEWORKS MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS OPERATIONAL MANAGEMENT PERFORMANCE DATA POLITICAL INTERESTS POLITICIANS PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC MANAGEMENT PUBLIC TRUST RESULT SAFE WATER SAFE WATER SUPPLY SANITATION SANITATION UTILITIES SERVICE PROVIDER SERVICE PROVIDERS SERVICE PROVISION SUSTAINABLE WATER TARGETS TRANSACTION USER USER COMMUNITIES USERS UTILITY GOVERNANCE UTILITY MANAGEMENT UTILITY STAFF WATER SECTOR WATER SERVICES WATER SUPPLY WATER UTILITIES This note presents tools that can help make service providers more accountable to the people they serve. The voice of users is often muted in water utilities. One consequence is that utilities do not take account of users' priorities and preferences. The utility, in turn, loses the trust and cooperation of the community that it is supposed to serve. The result is often service deterioration, further alienating users. Traditionally, users relied on politicians to maintain oversight of budgets and compliance with rules and to intervene on their behalf when services failed. This institutionalized a long route of accountability from user to political representative to service provider. Modern approaches to public management seek to hold service providers more directly accountable to their users for the outcomes of their work. Providers are expected to ensure that water flows safely and reliably from taps, that blocked drains are cleared, and that services are accessible and affordable to all. Accountability in this context is about establishing a direct short route between users and service providers. Tools for accountability cannot by themselves provide sustainable water services. But their use can contribute to this goal, by improving utility practices and the utility's policy and institutional environment. 2012-08-13T15:57:21Z 2012-08-13T15:57:21Z 2008-06 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/06/9677440/consumers-count-water-sanitation-utilities-can-more-accountable-users http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11763 English Water P-Notes; No. 15 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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Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
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World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English |
topic |
ACCESS TO INFORMATION ACCOUNTABILITY ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES CIVIL SOCIETY COMPLAINT CONFIDENCE CUSTOMER SERVICE DAY-TO-DAY OPERATIONS DECISION MAKING DRAINS FINANCIAL CONSTRAINTS HOUSEHOLD SANITATION INFORMATION PROVISION INFORMATION SHARING LEADERSHIP LEGAL FRAMEWORKS MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS OPERATIONAL MANAGEMENT PERFORMANCE DATA POLITICAL INTERESTS POLITICIANS PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC MANAGEMENT PUBLIC TRUST RESULT SAFE WATER SAFE WATER SUPPLY SANITATION SANITATION UTILITIES SERVICE PROVIDER SERVICE PROVIDERS SERVICE PROVISION SUSTAINABLE WATER TARGETS TRANSACTION USER USER COMMUNITIES USERS UTILITY GOVERNANCE UTILITY MANAGEMENT UTILITY STAFF WATER SECTOR WATER SERVICES WATER SUPPLY WATER UTILITIES |
spellingShingle |
ACCESS TO INFORMATION ACCOUNTABILITY ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESSES CIVIL SOCIETY COMPLAINT CONFIDENCE CUSTOMER SERVICE DAY-TO-DAY OPERATIONS DECISION MAKING DRAINS FINANCIAL CONSTRAINTS HOUSEHOLD SANITATION INFORMATION PROVISION INFORMATION SHARING LEADERSHIP LEGAL FRAMEWORKS MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS OPERATIONAL MANAGEMENT PERFORMANCE DATA POLITICAL INTERESTS POLITICIANS PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC MANAGEMENT PUBLIC TRUST RESULT SAFE WATER SAFE WATER SUPPLY SANITATION SANITATION UTILITIES SERVICE PROVIDER SERVICE PROVIDERS SERVICE PROVISION SUSTAINABLE WATER TARGETS TRANSACTION USER USER COMMUNITIES USERS UTILITY GOVERNANCE UTILITY MANAGEMENT UTILITY STAFF WATER SECTOR WATER SERVICES WATER SUPPLY WATER UTILITIES Muller, Mike Simpson, Robin Ginnekan, Meike van Consumers Count : How Water and Sanitation Utilities Can Become More Accountable to Their Users |
relation |
Water P-Notes; No. 15 |
description |
This note presents tools that can help
make service providers more accountable to the people they
serve. The voice of users is often muted in water utilities.
One consequence is that utilities do not take account of
users' priorities and preferences. The utility, in
turn, loses the trust and cooperation of the community that
it is supposed to serve. The result is often service
deterioration, further alienating users. Traditionally,
users relied on politicians to maintain oversight of budgets
and compliance with rules and to intervene on their behalf
when services failed. This institutionalized a long route of
accountability from user to political representative to
service provider. Modern approaches to public management
seek to hold service providers more directly accountable to
their users for the outcomes of their work. Providers are
expected to ensure that water flows safely and reliably from
taps, that blocked drains are cleared, and that services are
accessible and affordable to all. Accountability in this
context is about establishing a direct short route between
users and service providers. Tools for accountability cannot
by themselves provide sustainable water services. But their
use can contribute to this goal, by improving utility
practices and the utility's policy and institutional environment. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Brief |
author |
Muller, Mike Simpson, Robin Ginnekan, Meike van |
author_facet |
Muller, Mike Simpson, Robin Ginnekan, Meike van |
author_sort |
Muller, Mike |
title |
Consumers Count : How Water and Sanitation Utilities Can Become More Accountable to Their Users |
title_short |
Consumers Count : How Water and Sanitation Utilities Can Become More Accountable to Their Users |
title_full |
Consumers Count : How Water and Sanitation Utilities Can Become More Accountable to Their Users |
title_fullStr |
Consumers Count : How Water and Sanitation Utilities Can Become More Accountable to Their Users |
title_full_unstemmed |
Consumers Count : How Water and Sanitation Utilities Can Become More Accountable to Their Users |
title_sort |
consumers count : how water and sanitation utilities can become more accountable to their users |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/06/9677440/consumers-count-water-sanitation-utilities-can-more-accountable-users http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11763 |
_version_ |
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