BEPAM Issue 3.1 (Vol. 3 Issue 1) CONTENTS:
Prevention through design: Trade-offs in reducing occupational health and safety risk for the construction and operation of a facility
Helen Lingard, Tracy Cooke, Nick Blismas, Ron Wakefield,
A Framework for Stakeholder Management and Corporate Culture
Jason von Meding, Keith McAllister, Lukumon Oyedele, Kevin Kelly
Modeling and Assessment of Competencies in Urban Local Bodies for Implementing PPP projects
Ganesh A. Devkar, Satyanarayana N. Kalidindi
External Agencies for Supplementing Competencies in Indian Urban PPP Projects
Ganesh A. Devkar, Satyanarayana N. Kalidindi
Value through Innovation in Long-term Service Delivery: Facility Management in an Australian PPP
Graham Brewer, Thayaparan Gajendran, Marcus Jefferies, Denny McGeorge, Steve Rowlinson, Andrew Dainty
PFI/ PPP, private sector perspectives of UK Transport & Healthcare
Robert Eadie, Phillip Millar, Rory Grant
Bathtub Curves and Pipe Prioritization based on Failure Rates
Amarjit Singh, Stacy Adachi
Use of ANNs in Complex Risk Analysis Applications
Nayanthara De Silva, Malik Ranasinghe, C.R. De Silva
Strategies for Construction Waste Management in
BEPAM Issue 3.1 (Vol. 3 Issue 1) EDITORIAL:
JOINING HANDS AND ADVANCING TOGETHER
After two good years and two well-received volumes, the BEPAM editorial team forges ahead with some minor transitions, that also align with adjustments at the publishing end. Emerald now has a Managing Editor helping each journal and we look forward to the increased support through this new role, as well as to the expected enhanced dissemination of the BEPAM message through Emerald, along with our steadily growing recognition and impact.
On our side, Thomas Ng and Linda Fan change their hats to ‘Joint Editors’, while Florence Ling and Janaka Ruwanpura move on to new positions as Deputy Editors;
Athena Roumboutsos takes on an Associate Editor role. Koshy Varghese moves from Regional Editor - Asia to the Editorial Advisory Board, while Ananda Jayawardane moves in the reverse direction from the Editorial Advisory Board to become our new Regional Editor -
BEPAM arranged and presented ‘Best Paper Awards’ at two conferences in 2012: (1) the International Conference in the Built Environment in Developing Countries, in December, at Adelaide, Australia; and (2) the International Conference on Sustainable Built Environment at Kandy, Sri Lanka, also in December 2012. We are currently assessing papers for our annual Journal ‘Best Paper Awards’ from among those published in 2012 i.e. in Volume 2.
The current 3.1 issue, as in our previous ones, also benefits from the dual dynamics of thematic linkages between papers, amidst the demographic diversity across papers. The underlying consolidated message underpins the overarching goals of linking and synergizing project management with asset management in the built environment.
While one does not expect a clearly coherent overall message from any one general issue, the message will be clearer with the focused topical thrusts in a Special Issue. In this context, we look forward to our forthcoming first Special Issue (BEPAM 3.2) on. ‘Public Private Partnerships in Transport: Theory & Practice’. Our Guest Editors working hard on this Special issue, are Athena Roumboutsos and Rosário Macário.
Meanwhile, the paper themes in this issue range from issues in PPP procurement; through those in stakeholder management and corporate culture, assessment and enhancement of competencies and construction waste management; to value through innovation in service delivery, occupational health and safety, complex risk analysis and replacements prioritisation in asset management. Fields covered range from transport, healthcare and urban local government to building and pipeline assets. It is always interesting to map useful patterns and pick out common threads that link upstream planning, design and construction to downstream operations, maintenance and optimal utilisation of our built assets.
From another perspective, the issues are based on scenarios ranging from different parts of both
BEPAM readers may have noted the steadily increasing numbers of papers in each issue. Although initially targeting 5 papers per issue in 2011, we never had less than 7 papers in each issue, while also upholding our high quality standards. We had 8 papers in the last issue and now have
Readers are invited to spread the word further, about our well positioned BEPAM forum, i.e. to more prospective authors, readers and facilitators or disseminators (e.g. relevant networks and libraries), if indeed you concur that we should extend our reach and strengthen our impact in connecting project management issues (of planning, design, construction etc.) with asset management issues (of operations, maintenance etc.) in the built environment. Bringing these under one BEPAM banner enables a holistic helicopter perspective of the often disparate principles and practices of sustainable built infrastructure and related asset life cycle issues.
Mohan Kumaraswamy