dc.description.abstract |
This dissertation examines the dimensions of sustainability in the provision and delivery
of urban infrastructure services in cities. By examining the role of regulation, institutions
and financing, urban infrastructure governance is a policy challenge for the federal
government system. The problem arises from the understanding that core infrastructure
services like roads, water, electricity are not public goods in the puritan sense. Given the
quasi-public good nature of them, it has economic, financial, environmental and social
ramifications that are integral to sustainability. This study, in specific, delves into the
landscape of the waste water management sector in Bengaluru through case studies. The
research necessitates the need to holistic utility management approach in terms of costbenefit analysis and financial valuation to build a market around the reuse of wastewater
thereby incentivising Public Private Partnerships in the effective and efficient delivery of
services to minimize negative externalities. |
en_US |