Cities as platforms for progress: local drivers of Rwanda's success
OUTPUT TYPE: Journal Article
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2019
TITLE AUTHOR(S): I.Turok
KEYWORDS: ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT, RWANDA, TOWNS
Print: HSRC Library: shelf number 10901
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/14033
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/14033
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
Abstract
Rwanda's has made remarkable all-round progress over the last 25 years. This is usually attributed to a determined national government under single-minded leadership. This paper draws attention to two local drivers of Rwanda's socio-economic development: community participation and a positive approach to urbanisation. Popular involvement in communal projects has helped to build and maintain many useful public facilities. It has also fostered social solidarity and dialogue between citizens and public officials. The positive urban policy has helped to create more efficient and liveable cities, which are driving economic prosperity and human development. Nevertheless, there is scope for greater consistency and alignment between top-down and bottom-up processes in order to improve the suitability and responsiveness of national policies and practices to grassroots realities.-
Related Research Outputs:
- Urban agglomerations and "city region" formation in South Africa: who are our truly competitive global bets?
- Urban agglomerations and "city region" formation in South Africa: who are our truly competitive global bets?
- Are globally competitive "city regions" developing in South Africa: formulaic aspirations or new imaginations?
- Baseline information on poverty in the City of Tshwane
- The evolving spatial form of cities in a globalising world economy: Johannesburg and Sao Paulo
- Have we not learned from Rwanda?
- Skills development strategies for inclusive and productive cities: phase 1 report
- Urban performance: indicators and trends
- Skills development strategies for inclusive and productive cities: toolkit
- State of the cities report 2006
- Capital cities in Africa: power and powerlessness
- Skills development strategies for inclusive and productive cities: toolkit
- Inclusive African cities: mapping challenges and opportunities in contemporary urban Africa
- City revolutions: Johannesburg's 'supercity' ambitions
- Towards slum-free cities: MDG impacts on South Africa's policies, strategies and activities so far
- City of Tshwane: safer city policy
- "Working in the cities"
- The economy of cities
- Why transport is not the only way to get our cities moving
- The world cup and urban revitalisation