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Ebola: Public-private partnerships
Science, 2014According to the World Health Organization, the current Ebola epidemic is unlikely to be controlled in the coming months ([ 1 ][1]). With the exception of the compassionate use of unregistered compounds ([ 2 ][2]), no specific medical interventions, including the use of antiviral drugs, antibodies,
Leslie A. Reperant+6 more
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Public private partnerships: an introduction
Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal, 2003Public private partnerships (PPPs) are a recent extension of what has now become well known as the “new public management” agenda for changes in the way public services are provided. PPPs involve organisations whose affiliations lie in respectively the public and private sectors working together in partnership to provide public services.
Jane Broadbent, Richard Laughlin
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Efficient Public-Private Partnerships [PDF]
This paper presents a model to assess the efficiency of the capital structure in public-private partnerships (PPP). A main argument supporting the PPP approach for investment projects is the transfer of managerial skills and know-how from the private partner to the investment vehicle.
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2018
Public-private partnerships (PPPs) are organizational forms involving public and private institutions and aiming at the provision of assets, goods, or services that, to a large extent, are relevant in terms of public interest. Alternatively, the same tasks (e.g., construction, operation, maintenance, financing) can be pursued by full-fledged public ...
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Public-private partnerships (PPPs) are organizational forms involving public and private institutions and aiming at the provision of assets, goods, or services that, to a large extent, are relevant in terms of public interest. Alternatively, the same tasks (e.g., construction, operation, maintenance, financing) can be pursued by full-fledged public ...
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Accounting for Public Private Partnerships
Accounting Forum, 2002A public–private partnership (PPP) can be defined as a cooperative arrangement between the public and private sectors for the sharing of the risks and responsibilities for the provision of asset–based (infrastructure) services. The long–term contractual nature of the business relationship leads to difficult financial issues, related to taxation, cash ...
Darrin Grimsey, Mervyn K. Lewis
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Public-private partnerships: an overview
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 2005The development and marketing of medicines needed specifically to combat diseases of the developing world are commercially unattractive because the populations concerned are among the poorest on earth. Partnerships which bring together pharmaceutical companies, academics, not-for-profit organizations, philanthropists, governmental and inter ...
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Public-Private Partnerships for Health
Journal of Health Communication, 2007The twenty-first century heralds most health and social services predominately provided and financed directly by government.
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The Public Private Partnership
1998The attraction of the topic of Public Private Partnership (PPP) is amply witnessed both by the numerous publications in existence on the subject (see references) and also by the fact that there is an increasing number of cases of its practical implementation.
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Public-Private Partnerships for the Unemployed
European Journal of Social Security, 2010Under new dimensions of individualisation, decentralisation and particularly marketisation, new forms of public-private partnerships between the actors involved in the employment services for the unemployed have emerged. This is because for-profit providers have now entered the arena of welfare to work.
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