Conclusions and Recommendations
The concluding chapter summarizes the key findings of this study. The conclusions of the study are drawn based on the findings and the discussions presented in the previous chapters. This chapter also presents the contributions of the study to knowledge a
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Daniel Amos Cheong Peng Au-Yong Zairul Nisham Musa
Measurement of Facilities Management Performance in Ghana's Public Hospitals
Management in the Built Environment Series Editor Low Sui Pheng, National University of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore Editorial Board Abdul Rashid Bin Abdul Aziz, University Science Malaysia, Penang, Malaysia An Min, Salford University, Salford, UK Azlan Shah Ali, Faculty of Built Environment, University of Malaya, Department of Building Surveying, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Faisal M. Arain, Niagara College, Makkah Campus, Welland, ON, Canada Fang Dongping, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China Gao Shang, University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, Australia George Ofori, London South Bank University, London, UK Hamzah A. Rahman, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Javier Cuervo, Department of Management and Marketing, University of Macau, Taipa, Macau, Guangdong, China Liu Junying, Department of Construction Management, Tianjin University, Nankai, Tianjin, China Oluwayomi K. Babatunde, Construction Economics & Management, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa Oswald Chong, School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA
The aim of this book series is to provide a platform to build and consolidate a rigorous and significant repository of academic, practice and research publications that contribute to further knowledge relating to management in the built environment. Its objectives are to: 1. Disseminate new and contemporary knowledge relating to research and practice in the built environment 2. Promote synergy across different research and practice domains in the built environment and 3. Advance cutting-edge research and best practice in the built environment The scope of this book series is not limited to “management” issues per se because this then begs the question of what exactly are we managing in the built environment. While the primary focus is on management issues in the building and construction industry, its scope has been extended upstream to the design management phase and downstream to the post-occupancy facilities management phase. Management in the built environment also involves other closely allied disciplines in the areas of economics, environment, legal and technology. Hence, the starting point of this book series lies with project management, extends into construction and ends with facilities management. In between this spectrum, there are also other management-related issues that are allied with or relevant to the built environment. These can include, for example cost management, disaster management, contract management and management of technology. This book series serves to engage and encourage the generation of new knowledge in these areas and to offer a publishing platform within which different strands of management in the built environment can be positioned to promote synergistic collaboration at their interfaces. This book series also provides a platform for other authors
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