Search
Experiences of countries Second mid-term evaluation of UNTACDA II: Volume VII
(1997-10)
In order to ensure wider dissemination of the efforts made by States to develop the transport and communications sector, ECA selected, at the sub regional level, some countries which were requested to send in reports of ...
Priority Transport and Communications Programme for African Land-Locked Countries
(1987-03)
General Assembly resolution 38/150 adopted on 19 December 1983 requested inter alia the Executive Secretary of ECA to urgently prepare programmes on transport and communications of special importance to land-locked developing ...
Appraisal of transport sector developments Second mid-term assessment of UNTACDA II: Volume IV-A
(1997-10)
In this part of the report the development of eight sub sectors was assessed as well as two thematic problems corresponding to global objectives No. 3 (development of manpower institutions) and No. 5 (transport data bank). ...
The situation of railways and rail transport in the UNTACDA II programme
(1997-10)
For a continent like Africa, the problem of transport assumes primary importance to a large extent the possibility of making rational use of such natural resources as minerals and To rest, establishing new industries, ...
Summary of the second mid-term assessment of UNTACDA II : Volume I
(1997-10)
This report is on the mid-term evaluation. The first evaluation conducted in 1994, concluded, naturally, that the Decade objectives were indeed relevant, and that there was a need to implement the Decades programme taking ...
Evaluation of the implementation mechanisms : Second mid - term assessment of UNTACDA II
(1997-10)
The implementation strategy, based on the programme prepared in accordance with the "bottom-to-top" approach, used a mechanism comprising: (a) At the national level: National Coordinating Committees (NCCs) (b) At the ...
Introduction, objectives and methods Second mid-term assessment of UNTACDA II: Volume II
(1997-10)
Transport and communications are a sector that African States have always considered important for their economic development and the social progress of their people, in general, and for industrial development, trade ...