Effective Post-Disaster Reconstruction of Infrastructure : Experiences from Aceh and Nias
The Multi Donor Fund for Aceh and Nias (MDF) and the Java Reconstruction Fund (JRF) have played significant roles in the remarkable recovery of Aceh, Nias and Java, following some of the worst disasters in Indonesia in recent years. The MDF and the...
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World Bank, Jakarta
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/12/18774022/effective-post-disaster-reconstruction-infrastructure-experiences-aceh-nias http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17636 |
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okr-10986-176362021-04-23T14:03:39Z Effective Post-Disaster Reconstruction of Infrastructure : Experiences from Aceh and Nias MDF-JRF Secretariat ACCESSIBILITY ACCOUNTABILITY ADB AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION ARMED FORCES ARTERIAL ROAD BIKES BRIDGE CARS CIVIL SOCIETY COMMUNITY INFRASTRUCTURE COMPROMISES CONFLICT CONFLICT SITUATIONS COST OF DELAY COUNTERPART COUNTERPART FUNDS CROSSINGS DEATHS DEVELOPMENT PROJECT DISASTER DISASTER PREPAREDNESS DISASTER RECOVERY DISASTER RISK DISASTER RISK REDUCTION DISASTER SITUATIONS DISASTER SURVIVORS DISASTER-PRONE COUNTRIES DISASTERS DISPUTE RESOLUTION DISTRICT GOVERNMENTS DRAINAGE EARTHQUAKE EARTHQUAKES ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC RECOVERY EMERGENCY CIRCUMSTANCES EMERGENCY TRANSPORTATION EMPLOYMENT FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FLOOD FLOODING FLOODS FLOW OF TRAFFIC FOUNDATIONS HIGHWAY HOUSING INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT JETTIES LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENT BUDGETS LOCAL GOVERNMENT STRUCTURES LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOCAL ROADS LOCAL TRANSPORT MDF MEETING MIGRATION MODALITIES MODALITY MUNICIPALITIES NATIONAL BUDGET NATIONS NATURAL DISASTERS NATURAL HAZARDS NATURAL RESOURCES PEACE POPULATION DENSITY PORTS PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PROJECT DESIGN PROJECT IMPLEMENTATION PROPERTY RIGHTS PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENTS PUBLIC PUBLIC SERVICES PUBLIC WORKS REBEL RECONSTRUCTION RECONSTRUCTION ACTIVITIES REHABILITATION RIGHT-OF-WAY ROAD ROAD IMPROVEMENTS ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE ROAD LINKS ROAD MAINTENANCE ROAD NETWORK ROAD SHOULDERS ROAD TRANSPORT ROAD WIDENING ROADS RURAL INFRASTRUCTURE RURAL ROADS RURAL TRANSPORT RURAL TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE SANITATION SAVINGS SOCIAL SERVICES STORM STRATEGIC PLANNING STREETS SURVIVORS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TOLL TRAILS TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT TRANSPORT COSTS TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE TRANSPORT SECTOR TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION NETWORK TRANSPORTATION NETWORKS TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS TRAVEL TIME TRUST FUNDS TSUNAMI TSUNAMIS UNDP URBAN DEVELOPMENT URBAN DRAINAGE URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE URBAN POVERTY VEHICLE VEHICLE OPERATION VICTIMS VOLCANO WATER SUPPLY WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS The Multi Donor Fund for Aceh and Nias (MDF) and the Java Reconstruction Fund (JRF) have played significant roles in the remarkable recovery of Aceh, Nias and Java, following some of the worst disasters in Indonesia in recent years. The MDF and the JRF, which is patterned after it, are each considered a highly successful model for post-disaster reconstruction. This paper discusses the value of a phased approach to post-disaster reconstruction as a successful means to manage short-term expectations while delivering long-lasting, results of high quality. The natural disasters of late 2004 and early 2005 left a trail of human loss and destruction in Aceh and Nias. There was huge pressure on all actors involved in the reconstruction process to act fast and get projects ready for implementation. The MDF adopted a phased approach to the reconstruction. The implementation of nearly all projects in the roads sub-sector was fully satisfactory, with positive economic benefits attributable to the various projects. Most of the projects under the MDF infrastructure portfolio placed significant emphasis on capacity building to enhance the sustainability of assets created. The MDF's experience in implementing its large-scale infrastructure program offers many lessons for future reconstruction efforts in similar contexts in Indonesia elsewhere. 2014-04-07T19:13:07Z 2014-04-07T19:13:07Z 2012-12 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/12/18774022/effective-post-disaster-reconstruction-infrastructure-experiences-aceh-nias http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17636 English en_US MDF-JRF working paper series;no. 3 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Jakarta Publications & Research :: Working Paper East Asia and Pacific Indonesia |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
ACCESSIBILITY ACCOUNTABILITY ADB AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION ARMED FORCES ARTERIAL ROAD BIKES BRIDGE CARS CIVIL SOCIETY COMMUNITY INFRASTRUCTURE COMPROMISES CONFLICT CONFLICT SITUATIONS COST OF DELAY COUNTERPART COUNTERPART FUNDS CROSSINGS DEATHS DEVELOPMENT PROJECT DISASTER DISASTER PREPAREDNESS DISASTER RECOVERY DISASTER RISK DISASTER RISK REDUCTION DISASTER SITUATIONS DISASTER SURVIVORS DISASTER-PRONE COUNTRIES DISASTERS DISPUTE RESOLUTION DISTRICT GOVERNMENTS DRAINAGE EARTHQUAKE EARTHQUAKES ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC RECOVERY EMERGENCY CIRCUMSTANCES EMERGENCY TRANSPORTATION EMPLOYMENT FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FLOOD FLOODING FLOODS FLOW OF TRAFFIC FOUNDATIONS HIGHWAY HOUSING INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT JETTIES LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENT BUDGETS LOCAL GOVERNMENT STRUCTURES LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOCAL ROADS LOCAL TRANSPORT MDF MEETING MIGRATION MODALITIES MODALITY MUNICIPALITIES NATIONAL BUDGET NATIONS NATURAL DISASTERS NATURAL HAZARDS NATURAL RESOURCES PEACE POPULATION DENSITY PORTS PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PROJECT DESIGN PROJECT IMPLEMENTATION PROPERTY RIGHTS PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENTS PUBLIC PUBLIC SERVICES PUBLIC WORKS REBEL RECONSTRUCTION RECONSTRUCTION ACTIVITIES REHABILITATION RIGHT-OF-WAY ROAD ROAD IMPROVEMENTS ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE ROAD LINKS ROAD MAINTENANCE ROAD NETWORK ROAD SHOULDERS ROAD TRANSPORT ROAD WIDENING ROADS RURAL INFRASTRUCTURE RURAL ROADS RURAL TRANSPORT RURAL TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE SANITATION SAVINGS SOCIAL SERVICES STORM STRATEGIC PLANNING STREETS SURVIVORS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TOLL TRAILS TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT TRANSPORT COSTS TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE TRANSPORT SECTOR TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION NETWORK TRANSPORTATION NETWORKS TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS TRAVEL TIME TRUST FUNDS TSUNAMI TSUNAMIS UNDP URBAN DEVELOPMENT URBAN DRAINAGE URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE URBAN POVERTY VEHICLE VEHICLE OPERATION VICTIMS VOLCANO WATER SUPPLY WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS |
spellingShingle |
ACCESSIBILITY ACCOUNTABILITY ADB AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION ARMED FORCES ARTERIAL ROAD BIKES BRIDGE CARS CIVIL SOCIETY COMMUNITY INFRASTRUCTURE COMPROMISES CONFLICT CONFLICT SITUATIONS COST OF DELAY COUNTERPART COUNTERPART FUNDS CROSSINGS DEATHS DEVELOPMENT PROJECT DISASTER DISASTER PREPAREDNESS DISASTER RECOVERY DISASTER RISK DISASTER RISK REDUCTION DISASTER SITUATIONS DISASTER SURVIVORS DISASTER-PRONE COUNTRIES DISASTERS DISPUTE RESOLUTION DISTRICT GOVERNMENTS DRAINAGE EARTHQUAKE EARTHQUAKES ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC RECOVERY EMERGENCY CIRCUMSTANCES EMERGENCY TRANSPORTATION EMPLOYMENT FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FLOOD FLOODING FLOODS FLOW OF TRAFFIC FOUNDATIONS HIGHWAY HOUSING INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT JETTIES LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENT BUDGETS LOCAL GOVERNMENT STRUCTURES LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOCAL ROADS LOCAL TRANSPORT MDF MEETING MIGRATION MODALITIES MODALITY MUNICIPALITIES NATIONAL BUDGET NATIONS NATURAL DISASTERS NATURAL HAZARDS NATURAL RESOURCES PEACE POPULATION DENSITY PORTS PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PROJECT DESIGN PROJECT IMPLEMENTATION PROPERTY RIGHTS PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENTS PUBLIC PUBLIC SERVICES PUBLIC WORKS REBEL RECONSTRUCTION RECONSTRUCTION ACTIVITIES REHABILITATION RIGHT-OF-WAY ROAD ROAD IMPROVEMENTS ROAD INFRASTRUCTURE ROAD LINKS ROAD MAINTENANCE ROAD NETWORK ROAD SHOULDERS ROAD TRANSPORT ROAD WIDENING ROADS RURAL INFRASTRUCTURE RURAL ROADS RURAL TRANSPORT RURAL TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE SANITATION SAVINGS SOCIAL SERVICES STORM STRATEGIC PLANNING STREETS SURVIVORS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TOLL TRAILS TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT TRANSPORT COSTS TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE TRANSPORT SECTOR TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION NETWORK TRANSPORTATION NETWORKS TRANSPORTATION SYSTEMS TRAVEL TIME TRUST FUNDS TSUNAMI TSUNAMIS UNDP URBAN DEVELOPMENT URBAN DRAINAGE URBAN INFRASTRUCTURE URBAN POVERTY VEHICLE VEHICLE OPERATION VICTIMS VOLCANO WATER SUPPLY WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS MDF-JRF Secretariat Effective Post-Disaster Reconstruction of Infrastructure : Experiences from Aceh and Nias |
geographic_facet |
East Asia and Pacific Indonesia |
relation |
MDF-JRF working paper series;no. 3 |
description |
The Multi Donor Fund for Aceh and Nias
(MDF) and the Java Reconstruction Fund (JRF) have played
significant roles in the remarkable recovery of Aceh, Nias
and Java, following some of the worst disasters in Indonesia
in recent years. The MDF and the JRF, which is patterned
after it, are each considered a highly successful model for
post-disaster reconstruction. This paper discusses the value
of a phased approach to post-disaster reconstruction as a
successful means to manage short-term expectations while
delivering long-lasting, results of high quality. The
natural disasters of late 2004 and early 2005 left a trail
of human loss and destruction in Aceh and Nias. There was
huge pressure on all actors involved in the reconstruction
process to act fast and get projects ready for
implementation. The MDF adopted a phased approach to the
reconstruction. The implementation of nearly all projects in
the roads sub-sector was fully satisfactory, with positive
economic benefits attributable to the various projects. Most
of the projects under the MDF infrastructure portfolio
placed significant emphasis on capacity building to enhance
the sustainability of assets created. The MDF's
experience in implementing its large-scale infrastructure
program offers many lessons for future reconstruction
efforts in similar contexts in Indonesia elsewhere. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Working Paper |
author |
MDF-JRF Secretariat |
author_facet |
MDF-JRF Secretariat |
author_sort |
MDF-JRF Secretariat |
title |
Effective Post-Disaster Reconstruction of Infrastructure : Experiences from Aceh and Nias |
title_short |
Effective Post-Disaster Reconstruction of Infrastructure : Experiences from Aceh and Nias |
title_full |
Effective Post-Disaster Reconstruction of Infrastructure : Experiences from Aceh and Nias |
title_fullStr |
Effective Post-Disaster Reconstruction of Infrastructure : Experiences from Aceh and Nias |
title_full_unstemmed |
Effective Post-Disaster Reconstruction of Infrastructure : Experiences from Aceh and Nias |
title_sort |
effective post-disaster reconstruction of infrastructure : experiences from aceh and nias |
publisher |
World Bank, Jakarta |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/12/18774022/effective-post-disaster-reconstruction-infrastructure-experiences-aceh-nias http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17636 |
_version_ |
1764437820721594368 |