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Regulating Municipal Water Supply Concessions: Accountability in Transitional China - Hardcover

Regulating Municipal Water Supply Concessions: Accountability in Transitional China - Hardcover

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by Yan Wei (Author)

This book discusses the recently introduced concession policy, which is also known as PPP worldwide, on municipal utilities policy in China. In this context, critics have claimed that there is a gap in accountability with regard to concessions. The author utilizes interdisciplinary methods and comparative studies, taking into account the situation in the EU and US to analyze the accountability gap some feel will be created when the policy is implemented. Taking water sector concessions as the subject of discussion, the author distinguishes between three types of accountability: traditional bureaucratic accountability, legal accountability and public accountability. By systematically analyzing the essential problems involved, the book attempts to achieve a better understanding of concession and its application in the context of public utilities and finds that the alleged accountability gap is attributed to traditional bureaucratic accountability in China and the concession system per se.

Back Jacket

This book discusses the recently introduced concession policy, which is also known as PPP worldwide, on municipal utilities policy in China. In this context, critics have claimed that there is a gap in accountability with regard to concessions. The author utilizes interdisciplinary methods and comparative studies, taking into account the situation in the EU and US to analyze the accountability gap some feel will be created when the policy is implemented. Taking water sector concessions as the subject of discussion, the author distinguishes between three types of accountability: traditional bureaucratic accountability, legal accountability and public accountability. By systematically analyzing the essential problems involved, the book attempts to achieve a better understanding of concession and its application in the context of public utilities, and finds that the alleged accountability gap is attributed to traditional bureaucratic accountability in China and the concession system per se. ​

Author Biography

Wei Yan is currently an Assistant Professor of Law at Shanghai University. She teaches and writes in the areas of economic law and policy. She has held visiting fellowship at the University of Vienna in Austria. She has published in a range of international journals, presented papers at numerous conferences and been invited as article reviewer for journals. Dr. Wei's research interests include Water Law and Policy, Comparative Business Law and Economic Law.

Number of Pages: 160
Dimensions: 0.44 x 9.21 x 6.14 IN
Illustrated: Yes
Publication Date: July 16, 2014