"OESO-landen." . . "Pays de l'OCDE." . . "Etudes de cas." . . "Publiek-private samenwerking." . . "Public Private Partnership." . . "Public-Private Partnership" . "Gouvernance." . . "SourceOECD (Service en ligne)" . . . . . . . . "Dedicated Public-Private Partnership Units A Survey of Institutional and Governance Structures" . "Dedicated Public-Private Partnership Units : A Survey of Institutional and Governance Structures" . . . . . . . "Dedicated public-private partnership units : a survey of institutional and governance structure" . . . "Dedicated public-private partnership units : a survey of institutional and governance structures"@en . "Dedicated public-private partnership units : a survey of institutional and governance structures" . . . . "Étude comparée (Descripteur de forme)" . . . . . . . . . . . "Dedicated public-private partnership (PPP) units are organisations set up with full or partial aid of the government to ensure that the skills needed to handle third-party provision of goods and services are made available and clustered together within government. Such units enhance the capacity of government to successfully manage the risks associated with a growing number and value of PPPs. Although a relatively recent phenomenon, in 2009 more than half of all OECD countries reported the existence of a dedicated unit of some kind. This book provides an overview of dedicated PPP units in OECD countries, including case studies covering: the State of Victoria (Australia), Germany, Korea, South Africa (an OECD enhanced engagement country), and the United Kingdom. It examines the functions and locations of dedicated PPP units, the role they play in the procurement process and the lessons learned for other countries that have already established or are considering establishing a dedicated PPP unit. Further reading Public-Private Partnerships: In Pursuit of Risk Sharing and Value for Money (OECD, 2008)."@en . . "Dedicated public-private partnership (PPP) units are organizations set up with full or partial aid of the government to ensure that the skills needed to handle third-party provision of goods and services are made available and clustered together within government. Such units enhance the capacity of government to successfully manage the risks associated with a growing number and value of PPPs. Although a relatively recent phenomenon, in 2009 more than half of all OECD countries reported the existence of a dedicated unit of some kind. This book provides an overview of dedicated PPP units in OECD countries. It examines the functions and locations of dedicated PPP units, the role they play in the procurement process and the lessons learned for other countries that have already established or are considering establishing a dedicated PPP unit. --Publisher's description."@en . . . "Ressource Internet (Descripteur de forme)" . "Dedicated public-private partnership units a survey of institutional and governance structure"@en . "Dedicated public-private partnership units a survey of institutional and governance structure" . . . . . . . . "Livre électronique (Descripteur de forme)" . . . . "Electronic books"@en . "Cadre institutionnel." . . "Einrichtung." . . "OECD." . . "Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development." . . "Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development" . "Governance." . . "Governance" . "Partenariat public-privé." . . "Public-private sector cooperation." . . "Organisation de coopération et de développement économiques." . . . . "Organisation de coopération et de développement économiques." . . "PPP enhed." . . "OECD-Staaten" . . "PPP = public-private patnership." . . "Finance, Public." . .