When grand institutional reforms based on idealized models are stalled by the poor institutional environments and difficult politics which often surround large infrastructure systems in developing countries, partial reforms whose design and implementation take into account the different interests of the key stakeholders can provide valuable and immediate benefits while moving these systems from low- towards higher-level equilibria. Strategically negotiated, experimentally partial and purposefully hybrid, these reforms are based on careful stakeholder analysis and strategic coalition building that avoid rigid positions based on idealized models. Our findings are based on a study of power sector reforms in India, where we performed a micro-le...
Electric power is so vital to both our economic and personal wellbeing that the erstwhile state poli...
In India, the supply of electricity relies heavily on a virtually bankrupt and sometimes corrupt sys...
It is commonly accepted that institutions influence economic development of countries. But, can we a...
Why do power sector reforms succeed and fail in democratic contexts? We conduct comparative case stu...
Power sector policy in India appears to have locked itself into adverse arrangements at least twice ...
Ongoing theft, corruption, and an artificially decreased pricing structure have made it nearly impos...
The power sector reforms of Delhi, the capital of India presents an interesting case in the evolutio...
India has a decade-long experience with independent regulatory agencies in public services as an ins...
Recent literature on the effectiveness of donor programmes points to the importance of understanding...
publisher: Elsevier articletitle: The politics of electricity reform: Evidence from West Bengal, Ind...
The crises of utilities in developing countries led to a World Bank diagnosis of their problems and ...
In many developing countries, the electricity system is too weak to meet growing demand and the avai...
Reforming the Power Sector in Transition: Do Institutions Matter? / Rabindra Nepal and Tooraj Jamas...
How has the Indian state changed with economic liberalization? While many scholars have explored the...
In many developing countries, the electricity system is too weak to meet growing demand and the avai...
Electric power is so vital to both our economic and personal wellbeing that the erstwhile state poli...
In India, the supply of electricity relies heavily on a virtually bankrupt and sometimes corrupt sys...
It is commonly accepted that institutions influence economic development of countries. But, can we a...
Why do power sector reforms succeed and fail in democratic contexts? We conduct comparative case stu...
Power sector policy in India appears to have locked itself into adverse arrangements at least twice ...
Ongoing theft, corruption, and an artificially decreased pricing structure have made it nearly impos...
The power sector reforms of Delhi, the capital of India presents an interesting case in the evolutio...
India has a decade-long experience with independent regulatory agencies in public services as an ins...
Recent literature on the effectiveness of donor programmes points to the importance of understanding...
publisher: Elsevier articletitle: The politics of electricity reform: Evidence from West Bengal, Ind...
The crises of utilities in developing countries led to a World Bank diagnosis of their problems and ...
In many developing countries, the electricity system is too weak to meet growing demand and the avai...
Reforming the Power Sector in Transition: Do Institutions Matter? / Rabindra Nepal and Tooraj Jamas...
How has the Indian state changed with economic liberalization? While many scholars have explored the...
In many developing countries, the electricity system is too weak to meet growing demand and the avai...
Electric power is so vital to both our economic and personal wellbeing that the erstwhile state poli...
In India, the supply of electricity relies heavily on a virtually bankrupt and sometimes corrupt sys...
It is commonly accepted that institutions influence economic development of countries. But, can we a...