Details

Supporting Inclusive Growth and Sustainable Development in Africa - Volume II


Supporting Inclusive Growth and Sustainable Development in Africa - Volume II

Transforming Infrastructure Development

von: Elena G. Popkova, Bruno S. Sergi, Lubinda Haabazoka, Julia V. Ragulina

CHF 118.00

Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 27.10.2020
ISBN/EAN: 9783030419837
Sprache: englisch

Dieses eBook enthält ein Wasserzeichen.

Beschreibungen

This edited volume explores and dissects Africa's economic growth and sustainable development using an optimal conceptual model of the progressive continent's development up to and until 2030. Africa is studied not against the background of developed (OECD) and leading developing (e.g. BRICS) countries, but as a separate economy and as a self-sufficient region which follows its own priorities, and implements its own unique opportunities and vectors of growth and development. This volume addresses the contemporary and topical issues of inclusive growth, digital modernisation, and sustainable development, recommending policy outcomes for the future.
<p><b>Part I: Transforming Infrastructure Development</b></p>

<p>Chapter 1. Corporate Governance in South Africa: A Comparative Aspect</p>

<p>Chapter 2. Hi-Tech Development of Modern Africa: Opportunities and Barriers</p>

<p>Chapter 3. Information Society, Telecommunication Infrastructure, and Digital Entrepreneurship in Modern Africa</p>

<p>Chapter 4. The Impact of Obsolescence on Public-Private Partnership Projects in South Africa</p>

<p>Chapter 5. The Strategic Benefits of Innovation Adoption in Construction Consultancy Firms: The Role of Quantity Surveyors</p>

<p>Chapter 6. Factors Affecting Effective Infrastructure Service Delivery in Zambia’s Local Authorities: A Case of Eastern Province</p>

<p>Chapter 7. Adoption Level of FAO’s Valuation Guidelines in Nigeria</p>

<p>Chapter 8. An Empirical Analysis of Transportation Infrastructure Feasibility Study Considerations</p>

<p>Chapter 9. Smart Tourism for Enhancing Tourism Experience: Prospects and Challenges for Africa</p>

<p><b>Part II: Inclusive Economic Growth</b></p>

<p>Chapter 10. Women’s Entrepreneurship and Sustainable Livelihoods in Lusaka Urban</p>

<p>Chapter 11. African Union Outer Space Program: Chances and Challenges</p>

<p>Chapter 12. The Malabo Protocol on African Criminal Court: Challenges and Perspectives</p>

<p>Chapter 13. Integration in Africa: International Legal Competence of the East African Community in the Economic, Social and Cultural Sphere</p>

<p><b>Part III: Economic Diversification and Integration</b></p>

<p>Chapter 14. Framework for Attracting Traffic Back to the Railways in Zambia</p>

<p>Chapter 15. Planning and Designing Standard of Rural Road Construction in Lusaka Province: An Exploratory Study</p>

<p>Chapter 16. International Listed Real Estate Market Portfolio Diversification in BRICS </p>

<p>Chapter 17. Migration Trends in Sub-Saharan Africa-Domestic and International Socio-Politico-Economic Repercussions: Implications for Zambia</p>

<p>Chapter 18. Scenario of Modern Africa’s Development Until 2030 with Preservation of the Pre-Digital Technological Mode</p>

<p>Chapter 19. Africa 4.0 as a Perspective Scenario for Neo-Industrialization in the Twenty-First Century: Global Competitiveness and Sustainable Development</p>

<p>Chapter 20. Africa 4.0 as the Optimal Model of Development of the African Region of the Global Economic System Until 2030</p>

Chapter 21. Future Perspectives of Inclusive Growth of the African Economy<p></p>
<p><b>Elena G. Popkova </b>is Leading Researcher at Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO) and Plekhanov Russian University of Economics, and the President of the Institute of Scientific Communications, Russia. She has guest edited for a number of international journals and remains on the editorial board for several more journals.<b></b></p>

<b>Bruno S. Sergi&nbsp;</b>is Instructor of the Economics of Emerging Markets and the Political Economy of Russia and China at Harvard University, USA. He is also an Associate of the Harvard's Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies and the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute, and teaches Political Economy and International Finance at the University of Messina. Sergi is the Series Editor of Cambridge Elements in the Economics of Emerging Markets, the Series Editor of Entrepreneurship and Global Economic Growth, and an Associate Editor of&nbsp;<i>The American Economist</i>.&nbsp;<br> <p><b>Lubinda Haabazoka </b>is Director at the University of Zambia’s Graduate School of Business and President of the Economics Association of Zambia, Zambia. He served as Head of the Accounting and Finance Department at the Copperbelt University in Zambia from 2012 to 2016. <b></b></p>

<b>Julia V. Ragulina </b>is Head of the Chair of Compliance and Controlling at RUDN University, Russia. She is the author of more than 200 publications, including monographs on state control and audit, state and municipal management, and economics of municipal entities.<br>
This edited volume explores and dissects Africa's economic growth and sustainable development using an optimal conceptual model of the progressive continent's development up to and until 2030. Africa is studied not against the background of developed (OECD) and leading developing (e.g. BRICS) countries, but as a separate economy and as a self-sufficient region which follows its own priorities, and implements its own unique opportunities and vectors of growth and development. This volume addresses the contemporary and topical issues of inclusive growth, digital modernisation, and sustainable development, recommending policy outcomes for the future.
<p>Considers Africa’s economy independently to other countries’ economies and regions of the world</p><p>Presents a detailed elaboration of Africa’s specifics and tendencies of growth and development</p><p>Develops an optimal conceptual model of Africa’s development until 2030 and provides practical recommendations for its implementation</p><p>Includes a range of perspectives from African, European, and Russian scholars</p>