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Article

An Evaluation of Project Risk Dynamics in Sino-Africa Public Infrastructure Delivery; A Causal Loop and Interpretive Structural Modelling Approach (ISM-CLD)

by
Bridget Tawiah Badu Eshun
* and
Albert P.C. Chan
Department of Building and Real Estate, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Sustainability 2021, 13(19), 10822; https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910822
Submission received: 30 August 2021 / Revised: 19 September 2021 / Accepted: 22 September 2021 / Published: 29 September 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Risk Management Trends in Project-Based Organizations)

Abstract

:
Africa’s growth in public infrastructure provision has been fueled by the collective effort of the government authority and foreign private investors. China, through state-owned corporations, has become one of the leading infrastructure financier springing up numerous projects in transport, energy, oil and gas, water, and sewage sectors in Africa. Infrastructure procurement in developing countries comes with complexities and uncertainties. While Sino-Africa transnational public–private partnerships (TPPP) are becoming an increasingly popular route for public infrastructure procurement, their specific project risks and dynamics are not yet fully understood due to the typical assessment of risk autonomously. This paper identifies pertinent project risks in Sino-Africa TPPPs and applies system thinking in evaluating their behaviour and dynamics. An extensive review of literature and expert opinion employing semi-structured interviews was adopted in the identification and assessment of risk factors. Additionally, the study applied causal loop and interpretive structural modelling as an integrated approach in the assessment of risk behaviour from a systems perspective. Results indicate that risk factors associated with Sino-Africa TPPPs are interactive and portray curious systemic behaviour. Risk factors like force majeure and others associated with the governance structure and stability of the host African country are most influential, and their occurrence could inhibit project success. The study recommends that in conjunction with the conventional risk assessment by impact, systems thinking can be adopted to evaluate and comprehend the dynamics and interactions amongst the risk factors. This will improve risk assessment efficiency and fair allocation and treatment of risks as a conduit for project success and promote a win–win partnership for project actors.

1. Introduction

Infrastructure development is a critical catalyst to the quest for sustainable development in Africa. Most regions in Africa have gradually seen improvement in infrastructure attributable to the availability of foreign direct investments (FDIs) [1]. China is currently a major foreign investor in Africa’s infrastructure [2]. The Sino approach typically combines the provision of financial and technical aid through state-owned corporations in partnership with African government authorities, depicting a unique transnational public–private partnership (TPPP). Ref. [3], captured TPPPs as the collective involvement of non-state (transboundary) actors in the provision of public goods or services which are primarily the sole mandate of the state actors or government. This has been capitalised by most African countries as a unique arrangement through which public infrastructure is delivered [4]. Development sectors include transport, housing, oil and gas, water and sewage, information communication technology, mining, and energy [5]. The feat of public infrastructure provision in Africa is reliant on efficiency in managing risks due to socio-economic and political dynamics in the region [6]. Furthermore, the involvement of foreign corporations creates a partnership that is pivoted on the achievement of win–win arrangements [7], and one way is to ensure fair and efficient treatment and sharing of risks between these corporations (private actors) and the African government authority (public actor) [8].
Risk management (RM) is critical in the life cycle development of public infrastructure when delivered through non-state actors or private sector engagement like TPPP [9]. The poor management of risks has caused the failure of most infrastructure projects in developing countries [10]. TPPPs for public infrastructures are well known for the provision of basic facilities for livelihood and therefore considered as projects of high complexity. The influence and consequence of risks are much higher and detrimental in this setting, [11]. Complexity with these infrastructure projects is associated with large-scale works, long duration, and high investment. Moreover, the multistakeholder nature of these partnerships makes the handling and allocation of risks very intricate as compared to the traditional procurement practice [12]. The above project features make it difficult to manage risks effectively to achieve project success [13]. In developing countries, risk events in public infrastructure procurements are dynamic and occur at different stages of development [14]. Studies on Chinese infrastructure investments in Africa have reiterated the criticality of assessing and devising efficient strategies to manage the risk components of the projects [15,16]. The study of [17] further illustrated the dire effect of risk events on these arrangements sampling the Congo Siciomines project which has become less lucrative, and hence unsuccessful. Effective RM is, therefore, necessary for the successful implementation of Sino-Africa TPPPs. Risk management systematically entails the identification, assessment, allocation, and treatment or mitigation. Although studies have well established the cruciality and have focused on various aspects, limited attention and efforts have been put in probing the overall dynamics of infrastructure project risks. The assessment of risk interactions and how it affects the successful life cycle development of the project is overlooked [18].
Meanwhile, project risks in public infrastructure provision are interrelated and this questions the fundamental logic to typical project risk management, treating risks as independent [13]. This could project a wrong estimation of risk impact and can pose a limitation on the effectiveness of risk-sharing and treatment strategies adopted by project actors. Therefore, it is vital to consider dynamic interactions between project risks when assessing them. The concept of systems thinking can be applied in analysing the interrelationships between risk factors to facilitate better management and decision making [19]. The application of systems thinking in public infrastructure delivery through private sector involvement has gained much focus in recent times. There is maturing literature in system thinking in areas such as productivity, construction waste, and safety; however, exploration in risk management is comparatively limited [20].
In the field of systems thinking, the causal loop diagram (CLD) is a feedback enabling tool for critical analysis of complex problems [21]. A couple of risk management studies have adopted CLDs for risk evaluation [22,23,24]. Additionally, the interpretive structural modeling (ISM) also begets a structural and relationship analysis from the systems viewpoint and have also been adopted in risk management studies [25,26,27]. The robustness of dynamic systems evaluation is improved through the integration of these tools and has been adopted in recent risk evaluation studies [28,29]. The CLDs enable a better interpretation of the dynamics, while the ISM process establishes the relationships and dimensional order amongst the variables which enable prioritisation decisions. Given the criticality of systems thinking in risk assessment and the unique nature of Sino-Africa TPPPs, this study evaluates risk factors pertinent to the life cycle development of public infrastructure projects in Africa using the ISM-CLD approach. This project allows a better appreciation of risk behaviour for proper treatment, allocation, and control strategies towards the realisation of a win–win arrangement for both parties.

2. Literature Review

2.1. Sino-Africa Infrastructure Partnerships

The involvement of non-state actors (private sector) in the provision of public infrastructure has become a globally accepted and practiced procurement route. Public–private partnership is a collaboration between private sector corporations and public authorities for the direct provision of public goods or services through the combination of public sector oversight and private sector resources and expertise [30]. PPP has many forms and scales, usually established over design, financing, construction, tenure, operations, control, and handover modes [31]. According to [32], public–private partnerships have gained popularity in Africa and most of these partnerships involve foreign investors, i.e., Transnational PPPs (TPPPs). China has steadily combined the provision of financial and technical aid for the construction of infrastructure in most African countries with business pursuits and interests [7,33]. Unique to this type of partnership is the use of state-owned corporations who come in as private sector investors [34,35], which makes a distinctive representation of Transnational PPPs [36]. These partnerships also place much concern on the sharing of risks between the Chinese corporations and the African contracting authority in the implementation of public infrastructure. This is geared towards the success of the project and the promotion of win–win partnership and corporation ties between project actors [37].

2.2. Risk Management in Public Infrastructure Provision

The impact of risks on the successful completion of PPP projects cannot be underestimated [38]. Risk management follows a process of identification, assessment, allocation, and control tactics. Project actors desire to obtain a win–win partnership and this is dependent on the assessment and allocation of project risks [8]. Although risk sharing is the most significant aspect of the risk management process in PPPs, a poor assessment of risk factors could affect the fairness and efficiency in the allocation and eventually lead to project failure [39]. Studies in transnational PPPs also affirm that risks are assessed to determine the most efficient allocation and mitigation strategies [40,41]. Table 1 summarises risk factors in public infrastructure provision.

2.3. Systems Thinking in Risk Management

Risk management requires an interdisciplinary and adaptable method that allows capturing the changing behaviours of risks including the explanation of processes involved in the management of infrastructure construction [52].
Owing to the complex nature of PPP implementation, it is prudent to emphasise that risks events are not only numerous but have interaction among each other and the adoption of systems thinking enables feedback and structural analysis to simulate mitigation policies before development. Some classical risk management studies applied system dynamics in the development of risk classification systems and assessments from network simulations which enabled insight into risks without losing operational or practical advantages [53,54]. Comparatively, the application of system dynamics for problem-solving in PPP/PFI projects is small but has been rising over the past few years in risk assessment [55,56], based on a case study, adopted a qualitative application and developed a causal relationship diagram that features most risk factors including cost, environmental, design, schedule, construction, and quality risk factors. The study by [57] on the assessment of demand risk dynamics for toll road projects used a system dynamics method. Other studies also incorporated other analytical tools for the assessment of risks. For example, Ref. [58] developed an integrated fuzzy system dynamic (FSD) as a quantitative risk management approach. In addition, Ref. [59] assessed the dynamics of project risk complexities concerning design and construction in megaprojects using SDANP, an innovative combination of Analytical Network Process (ANP) and system dynamics (SD). More recently, other studies in risk assessment integrate methods that pedigree from systems thinking. For instance, Ref. [29] innovatively combined the interpretive structural modeling and system dynamics as an SD-ISM approach to assess and determine the dynamics of construction project risks in the design stage.

3. Research Methodology

The unique nature of Sino-African public infrastructure dealings propelled an interpretative approach to decipher its associated risk ecosystem. The study adopted systems thinking in the assessment of risk factors identified. Systems thinking deals with assessing issues or a problem as systemic wholes and provides a language for communicating dynamic complexities and interdependencies [60]. It emphasises that any problem or phenomenon directly or indirectly forms part of a bigger domain. Systems are constructs used for engaging with and improving situations of real-world complexities [61]. Systems thinking (ST) is applied exploratorily to understand the dynamic behaviour of risks in TPPPs. System thinking presents an integrated view of phenomena and eliminated the traditional view of problems in isolation. Through the development of a qualitative conceptual model coupled with a quantitative simulation, systems thinking determines the nonlinear behaviour and structure among variables, [62]. This paper is, however, focused on qualitatively developing and translating the systemic behaviour and structure of pertinent risk factors in Sino-African public infrastructure implementation. The study adopted a three-stage approach which includes a comprehensive review of literature, semi-structured expert interviews, and the development of the integrated causal loop and interpretive structural modelling approach. Figure 1 summarises the steps which are further elaborated in the ensuing sections.

3.1. Interpretive Structural Modelling (ISM)

Interpretive structural modelling is an effective tool that reveals the structure and hierarchical relationships between variables from a systems viewpoint. It was developed to create a systematic problem-solving approach to complex issues [63]. ISM involves measurement on ordinal scales and thus provides a modelling approach that permits qualitative elements to be retained as a vital part of the model. More so, it differs significantly from many conventional approaches that use only quantifiable variables [64]. The ISM provides a method by which order can be enacted on the complexity of variables [65], therefore decisions on risk prioritisation can also be made based on the hierarchical patterns developed. Furthermore, the MICMAC analysis is included in the ISM process to further describe the attributes and behaviours of the risk factors in the system. It is developed from the driving and dependency powers of the risk factors and categorises them into independent, autonomous, linkage, and dependent risks. Several studies incorporate the MICMAC analysis in ISM application [66,67,68].

3.2. Causal Loop Diagram (CLD)

To comprehend the dynamics of the risk factors, the causal loop diagram is adopted to describe the circular cause and effect relationships amongst them. This tool uncovers feedback structures and is typical for providing explicit conceptualisation in system dynamics which can be further analysed quantitatively [69]. CLDs define how the distinct elements in a system interact due to the influence of each specific element. The elements in the diagram are linked together by arrows describing which direction the connection is heading. These arrows may have positive or negative indicators, where a positive from one variable to another indicates a cause and effect in that regard, and a negative depicts a cause and effect in the opposite direction. These connecting arrows create feedback loops which could be described as balancing (B) or reinforcing (R) loops. The continuous upsurge in actions within the system is indicated by the R loop, while the B loop acts to introduce stability by reducing changes [70]. Figure 2 depicts an example of a typical CLD.

3.3. The ISM-CLD Approach

The integration of the interpretive structural modelling and the Causal loop diagram adequately enables system thinking in risk assessment as the ISM-CLD draws out the nonlinear, structural, and hierarchical relationships amongst the risk factors. The development of CLDs involves problem articulation and the building of a dynamic hypothesis. The ISM produces the hierarchical structure and relationships which instigates prioritisation. Furthermore, the approach in this study provides feed-in data based on expert opinion which replaces the process of inductively generating structural relationships typical in CLDs. The authors of [29] applied a similar method and determined the dynamics in design stage construction project risks using the SD-ISM approach. This approach builds a fortified systemigrams and assessment method. Figure 3 illustrates the workflow of the hybrid method applied in this study.

3.4. Data Collection

Risk evaluation using the ISM-CLD approach is an iterative and interpretive process and therefore requires the use of experts. Furthermore, the peculiarity of the Sino-African TPPPs requires engaging knowledgeable and experienced participants. Thus, primary data was elicited through expert semi-structured interviews. Prior to expert engagement, a comprehensive review of literature identified risks associated with transnational public–private partnerships in public infrastructure procurement. Furthermore, the review focused on case study papers on several projects in Africa to ensure generality. Based on the review findings, the expert interview was conducted for scoping of risk factors pertinent to Sino-Africa dealings as well as capturing risk factors eluded during literature review. The experts were also engaged as part of the ISM-CLD approach to establish relationships amongst risk factors similar to the study by [29].

4. Analysis and Results

4.1. Expert Profile

The integration of the ISM-CLD makes expert engagement integral to the problem-solving process. Moreover, the Sino-Africa dealings are unique and require in-depth knowledge and experience to realistically probe. There is no specified criterion on the number of experts to be engaged and the ISM approach does not require many respondents as much focus is placed on the experience and proficiency of respondents on the problem being analysed [67,71] using the ISM, sampled three experts and developed a structural relationship between lean implementation barriers. Further, Ref. [68] used four experts in their ISM modelling approach for identifying the failure paths of PPP water projects. The ISM thus produces reliable findings even with few experts due to its logic and analytical rigour [68,72]. The heterogeneity of the population should be considered [66], hence this study involved experts from the private sector (Sino), the public sector (African contracting authorities), and academic researchers in the field of risk management and public–private partnerships. Through snowballing, forty-seven experts were contacted and thirteen accepted the invitation. The number was adequate to produce reliable findings based on their level of experience coupled with the ISM process adopted. The experts described the study area (Sino-Africa infrastructure dealings) as sensitive and their participation was dependent on a guarantee to ensure anonymity in their identities, given the depth of information and engaging process of the ISM-CLD approach. Table 2 shows the profile of experts engaged.
Common to all experts was apt knowledge in public infrastructure implementation. The transport sector includes sea and land ports, roads bridges, and railways. Similarly, aside from residential, the housing includes commercial and business infrastructure like factories. The interviews were conducted in English and were based on the ISM principle which was developed into an interview guide to ensure standardised information elicitation for the study. This also helped to check bias and ensure uniformity in the entire process.

4.2. Components Identification

Components for the systemic modelling were identified based on a combined process of extensive literature review and expert roundtable. Literature on transnational public and private collaboration for public infrastructure delivery was reviewed coupled with studies of Sino-Africa dealings. In the TPPP setting, the allocation of risk is paramount therefore review was focused on identifying the commonly allocated risks, see Table 1. Knowledge depth and focus are critical in ISM-CLD; therefore, the study adopted semi-structured expert interviews. The identification of the pertinent risks is obtained through interaction with experts from their practical and/or research experiences in Sino-Africa TPPPs. Experts were engaged in two phases, first to identify risk factors and consequently establish their relationships. The expert interview drew up twenty-two risk factors associated with the partnership between Chinese corporations and African governments for the delivery of public infrastructure. These factors are described in Table 3. Results from the literature review were used as the basis for experts to outline the pertinent risks and offer experience-based descriptions of the risk factors. An ISM tool was used to aid in establishing the relationships using pairwise logic. Thematic content was used in the identification and delineation of pertinent risks, it involves an iterative process of identifying evaluating and reporting themes from data analysis [73]. The themes, i.e., risk factors and descriptions presented in Table 3 embody the patterned responses and meanings drawn from the data.

4.3. Systemic Risk Evaluation (ISM-CLD)

4.3.1. Structural Self-Interaction Matrix (SSIM)

This establishes the relationships among risk factors using a pairwise comparator where the columns and rows are denoted with i and j, respectively. V, A, X, and O are used to denote the description of relationships between the risk factors. The risk factors are built into a matrix and captured on an x and y-axis pane such that a cell Rij in the matrix shows the interaction between Ri and Rj on the x and y-axis, respectively. The VAXO connotes the following:
V = Ri influences Rj whereas Rj does not influence Ri;
A = Rj influences Ri whereas Ri does not influence Rj;
X = Ri influences Rj and Rj influences Ri;
O = Ri and Rj are unrelated.
The interpretive logic and direct relationship amongst the risk factors is presented in the Table 4.

4.3.2. Reachability Matrix (RM)

The initial reachability matrix is developed from the SSIM which involves conversion from the VOAX matrix into a binary matrix. This is achieved from conditional statements on the interpretation of the VOAX into either 1 or 0 on the x and y axis. The conditions are that given the cell ij entry in the SSIM, the connotation is:
V, the ij cell becomes 1 and the ji cell becomes 0;
A, the ij cell becomes 0 and the ji cell becomes 1;
X, the ij cell becomes 1 and the ji cell becomes 1;
O, the ij cell becomes 0 and the ji cell becomes 0.
For instance, cell R3R4 is A the binary conversion is 0 for R3R4 and 1 for R4R3. The results of the 22 × 22 binary matrix of risk relationships are presented in Table 5.

4.3.3. Final Reachability Matrix

This paper is focused on evaluating risks using systems thinking; however, the initial matrix establishes the direct relationships among the risk factors. In order to obtain both direct and indirect relationships, the transitivity check is used. Transitivity checks are established based on the premise that if R1 has a relationship with R2 and R2 has a relationship with R3 then R1 has a relationship with R3. The check for transitive links can be tricky and a manual approach for a huge matrix is cumbersome and require an automated process for precision. A function was developed in Python (see Appendix A for code) and was used in this process, which generated the final reachability matrix similar to [74].
The MICMAC analysis uses the driving and dependency powers of the risk factors as shown in Table 6.

4.3.4. Level Partitioning

The hierarchal structure and polarity of the risk relationships are ascertained at this level. This analysis involves computing the reachability set (Rs), antecedent set (As), and intersection set (Is). The risk factors with the corresponding value of 1 (including itself) on the row from the final RM matrix make up the reachability set. Similarly, the respective risk factors with a value of 1 on the column make the antecedent set. The common risk factors in the reachability and the antecedent sets constitute the intersection set. The hierarchical partitioning rule states that the risk factors are classified to a common level if Rs makes a proper subset of Is. Thus, the partitioning of risks into levels follows an iterative process of (i) identifying risks with the same elements in the reachability and the intersection column, and (ii) eliminating the risk factors from the table and repeating the initial step. This process is done until all risk factors are labelled and partitioned. For instance, R1 has the same elements in Rs and Is and therefore partitioned in level one, similarly for R5 and so on. The iterative level partitioning process in presented in Table 7.
The results present a three-level hierarchical structure based on the relationships amongst the risks factors. Level one featured 18 risk factors, three were captured in level two, and the third and final level had one risk factor. The higher the level the higher the driving power which implies that those risk factors influence the lower levels. For instance, R4, i.e., force majeure risk clustered in the highest level influences the occurrence of the other risks. A practical example is the COVID-19 pandemic, which has affected construction activities in most countries, economies, and industries. Furthermore, the risk factors in level two include government and political instability, weak regulatory frameworks and policy monitoring, and legal and regulatory changes. It is evident to note that these risks translate to the host country’s governance structure and dynamics, which is a topical issue in transnational partnerships in developing countries. Figure 4 presents the hierarchical structure of the risk factors.

4.3.5. MICMAC Analysis

Upon development of the hierarchical structure of the risk factors, the nature of the risk relationships is determined by the MICMAC analysis, which is also referred to as the cross-impact matrix multiplication. Ascertaining the attributes of the risk relationships is essential as it provides interpretive grounds for effective planning and control. Based on the magnitude of driving and dependence powers of the individual risk factors computed in the final reachability matrix, the MICMAC analysis reveals the individual attributes of the risk factors. The MICMAC adopts graphical plotting and sectioning of risk factors into four quadrants, namely, autonomous, dependent, independent, or linkage risk factors. The autonomous quadrant describes the risk factors that have low driving power and low dependency power and are considered to be somewhat disconnected from the system. The dependent quadrant envelopes those risk factors that have high dependency power and low driving power, and therefore the occurrence of those risks is highly dependent on other factors. In addition, the independent factors have high driving power and low dependency power, meaning that those risk factors are highly influential in the system. Finally, the linkage quadrant holds risk factors that have both high dependency and driving powers, meaning that they are unstable and can be affected as much as they affect other risk factors in the system. The sum of rows on the final RM matrix is the driving power which makes the y-axis and the sum of individual columns makes up the dependency power on the x-axis. The results are shown in Figure 5.
The results from the MICMAC present a curious relation to the hierarchical ISM diagram in Figure 4. Risk factors in levels I and II belong to the independent. This interprets that force majeure, government or political instability, weak regulatory framework and monitoring, and legal and regulatory changes risk factors directly or indirectly drive the occurrence of the other risk factors. Interestingly, the remaining risk factors also in level III of the hierarchical structure fall in the linkage quadrant. The linkage further implies that those risk factors demonstrate feedback behaviour in the system. The results from the MICMAC analysis further buttresses the ISM-CLD approach adopted in this study such that the feedbacks are explicitly assessed and interpreted using the CLD. Thus, additional interpretation of the relationship behaviour of the risk factors is collectively assessed with much focus on the risk factors in the level III and Linkage quadrant.

4.3.6. Causal Loop Diagram

Notwithstanding the graphical communication of the cause-and-effect relationships amid risk factors obtained in the CLDs, it enables the development of measures and mitigating strategies that can improve the system given the feedback and change behaviours of the risk factors. The focal point of the CLD is to divulge and understand the feedback and causal actions of the pertinent risks associated with Sino-Africa public infrastructure dealings to enable optimal and fair allocation. More so, the structural analysis and results from the ISM and MICMAC evaluation instigated the existence of dynamic relationships and feedback justifying further probing, modelling, and interpretation with the CLD. The CLD further interprets the relationships and best determines how and what mitigating strategies can be introduced in the system to ensure successful project implementation. The Vensim PLE was used in the design and analysis of the system. Figure 6 illustrates the loop diagram of the interactions in the system. The ISM analysis established the relationship density amongst risk factors (see final RM matrix), hence the CLD emphasises risk factors with the crucial feedback attributes. The arrows in the diagram illustrate that the risk at the tail influences the risk at the arrowhead. The regulation in CLDs describes a self-reinforcing system or a self-balancing system determined by the arrow directions and the (+/−) symbols on the arrowhead. The reinforcing system depicts a system that is in growth or increasing effect due to equivalent influences among system elements. In a self-balancing system, there is an element that controls or puts a limitation on growth [75].

4.3.7. Causal Path and Loop Interpretation

The expert evaluation of risk factors pertinent in the delivery of public infrastructure in Sino-Africa dealings summarised negative risks which formed the basis of the systemic analysis. The results in Figure 6 show a self-reinforcing system as the risks within the system reveal increasing influences with no element of control or limitation. This is demonstrated with positive cause and effect relationships among risk factors. The reinforcing activities in the system show that the occurrence of one risk will increase the occurrence of the other where there are no risk factors whose occurrence reduces the occurrence of another. For instance, an increase in the occurrence of market demand changes (see delineation in Table 3) can cause an increase in the occurrence of project performance and quality risk (also see Table 3), and also an increase in project performance and quality risk can cause an increase in the market demand changes.
The risk causal path analysis from the CLD focused on Level I and the Linkage risks from the ISM and MICMAC analysis respectively. This is to provide a further appreciation of the causal relationships amongst those risk factors. Additionally, this study is geared towards risk efficient assessment for fair risk allocation to promote project success. Therefore, causal paths for risk factors associated with the conventional project success criteria (time, cost, and quality) in the CLD are construed. Risk R15, project cost overrun; R22, delayed project schedule; and R12, project performance and quality risk, were selected and expanded under three scenarios.
Scenario 1—Project cost overrun. The system indicates that the delayed project schedule, force majeure, high cost of operation and maintenance, poor project feasibility studies, inadequate supporting infrastructure, and high project finance can influence the occurrence of cost overrun. These risk factors are also linked to other risk factors shown in Figure 7.
Scenario 2—Delayed project schedule. Considering the time success criteria, the risk factors that can cause a delay in project schedule include force majeure, land acquisition, poor project feasibility studies, poor sharing of risk and responsibilities, poor/lengthy public decision process, project cost overrun, and public opposition to the project. Other linking risk factors are captured in Figure 8.
Scenario 3—Project performance and quality risk. The causal tree from the system indicates that the high cost of operation and maintenance, changes in market demand, public opposition, and the weak regulatory framework and policy monitoring risk factors take a toll on the performance and quality risk. Further, into scenario three shown in Figure 9, force majeure and environmental risk also play influential actions on the quality risk.
The subtleties of force majeure (R4)R2, R3, and R11 (all associated with the governance structure and stability of the host country) are evident in all three scenarios. Furthermore, the delayed project schedule cost overrun as well as performance and quality risk factors are seen in a dynamic behaviour as they affect themselves and also influence other factors that, in turn, influence their occurrence in the system.

5. Discussion

Sino-Africa TPPP for public infrastructure provision is judged as one of the effective routes to bridging the infrastructure gap in Africa and it is anticipated that these dealings are likely to increase. This is especially with the inception of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), which has aided in providing infrastructure in different countries in Africa including, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Ghana, Nigeria, Tanzania, amongst others. In the life cycle development of public infrastructure, uncertainties and complexities are inevitable [76]; hence, assessment of risks is essential to the success of Sino-Africa TPPPs [77]. This study proves the realistic dynamics of the risk relationship causalities and structure in Sino-Africa TPPPs that require critical consideration during development. The sublevel risk determined in this study translates that most risk factors pertinent to Sino-Africa TPPPs are affected by other risks as much as they influence others (i.e., feedback behaviour) and the independent risk factors are force majeure and governance structure and stability related.

5.1. Force Majeure Risks

These are events that affect the project actors from normally performing their duties from no fault of either actor. The hierarchical level of force majeure risk in this study reveals that it can directly or indirectly influence the occurrence of all the other risks. Force majeure risk events include earthquakes, floods, fire, plague, and other natural disasters. The author of [77], in his evaluation of Sino-Africa TPPPs, indicated that this force majeure risk is usually shared among private and public parties; however, to the extent any such risks are capable of being insured against, they are often excluded from consideration. This means that project actors barely place focus on it due to the extent of uncertainty. However, recent happenings have challenged project actors to place measures to the best of their ability, to secure the project from suffering the occurrence of force majeure risk. The COVID-19 pandemic is a true indication of the impact of force majeure. The COVID-19 pandemic has caused an awakening in public–private partnership implementation and experts have begun probing efficient methods to maintain operations and control its effects on the project life cycle development [78,79,80]. This study re-echoes the causal dynamics of force majeure risk, which require more careful consideration in infrastructure delivery.

5.2. Governance Structures and Stability Related Risks

The next level of risks in Sino-Africa TPPPs is associated with the governance structure and stability of the host country in Africa. They include the government or political instability, legal and regulatory changes and weak regulatory framework, and policy monitoring risk. Usually, in the Sino-African setting, the host county’s financial system is not of much influence as compared to risk factors associated with governance structures and stability. This is attributable to the nature of partnership agreements ranging from infrastructure for mineral resources [81], inter-governmental concessionary loans and/or the EPC + F model (engineering procurement and construction plus finance) mostly adopted [77]. The weakness and inefficiencies in the legal and regulatory frameworks of some African countries have affected the early completion and success of infrastructure development in Sino-Africa TPPPs [7,82]. Political instability sometimes brings about changing priorities in governance which affect the smooth continuity of projects [83]. The study by [84] also stressed that poor leadership governance which lacks effective accountability or checks and balances poses negative risks to public infrastructure development in the region. Therefore, African governments must reform and ensure a tranquil and desirable governance environment with working structures to attract more partnerships to close the infrastructure gap [35]. Results from this study concur with the findings of [41] in risk assessment of TPPPs. It divulged that the risk factors regarding the host country environment must be prioritised by the investors and the entire project team.

5.3. Project Cost, Schedule, and Performance Quality-Related Risks

Successful implementation of public infrastructure given the Sino-African approach is measurable by the achievement of the cost, time, and quality dimensions [85]. Knowledge of the dynamics and occurrence of various risk events at different stages of project implementation equips project actors to primarily prevent or reduce the negative effect on time, cost, and quality. Studies in Sino-Africa infrastructure partnerships outline several reasons for the failure or challenging project implementation. Some of these include communication and cultural differences, bribery and corruption, conflict of interest, and lack of trust and transparency [86,87]. These risks affect negotiation and cause lengthy decision making and eventually the development and management of conditions of contract [88]. Poor contractual management has resulted in the failure of projects in meeting cost, time, and quality preferences. Furthermore, Ref. [89] asserted that delay in land acquisition and inadequate supporting infrastructure or facilities in West Africa affected the smooth implementation of infrastructure through Sino-Africa TPPPs. This affects the cost, schedule, and performance quality of the project and in some cases has sparked public opposition and rejection of the facility. [86,90]. The development of sound economic fundamentals in receiving countries creates a good and less risky investment environment as they limit the likelihood of high financing and cost overruns during project implementation [34,91]. TPPP project risks in infrastructure provision due to complexity and multistakeholder nature are critical and interactive throughout the various stages of implementation and the effective assessment and control of risks systemically will improve project cost, schedule, quality, and overall success of the project.

6. Conclusions

Most African governments through engagements with Chinese state-owned corporations have procured public infrastructure such as roads, railways, dams, and water treatment plants, among others. These partnerships are established on the sharing of project risks between the African government or contracting authority and the Chinese corporations. Studies have shown that infrastructure investments in Africa are heavily susceptible to negative risks due to the dynamic behaviour of the socio-economic and political environment in the region. Considering the uniqueness of Sino-Africa TPPP, and the risky nature of infrastructure implementation in Africa, the study considers the identification and assessment of pertinent risks in project delivery. Most TPPP studies assess risk factors focusing on their impact and criticality. However, these risks interact with each other and have feedbacks. Therefore, the commonly adopted traditional mode of assessing risks autonomously limits efficiency in the allocation and development of treatment and control strategies. Palpably, the assessment of risk exclusively by criticality may not warrant a better appreciation of the nature of the risks, and project actors tend to channel their focus on the critical and less critical sometimes ignored. This study emphasises that although some risks may not be seen as highly critical, they could have an influence on the occurrence or consequences of critical risks and therefore ignoring interrelationships during the assessment is inept. In view of this, the study adopts system thinking in the evaluation of risks whereby their interrelationships are determined and examined through an integrated approach using integrated structural modelling and causal loop diagram (ISM-CLD). The systemic assessment of the risk factors revealed a dense interrelationship, and the ISM iteration process built a three-level hierarchical structure of the Sino-Africa TPPP risks. Force majeure, risk factors associated with the governance structure and stability of the host African country, and all other identified risks are placed as level three, two, and one, respectively. The MICMAC evaluation further established level one risks as linkage risks (i.e., having high driving and dependence powers) and therefore have feedbacks on themselves. The causal loops enabled the assessment of these feedbacks and results showed that risk factors demonstrate a reinforcing systemic structure and can be used as a conceptual framework for developing mitigating strategies to balance the system. The ISM-CLD approach requires expert opinion and therefore poses a qualitative approach to systems thinking. The study was limited to a qualitative perspective through the elicitation of expert opinion; however, a larger number of professionals coupled with more project-based investigations can be quantitatively assessed. Therefore, the study recommends that other methods that combine quantitative assessment like system dynamics be explored to examine the mitigating strategies adopted. Furthermore, the causal risk paths can be used to develop hypotheses for further quantitative exploration. As a contribution to research and development, this study developed and applied a methodology i.e., ISM-CLD that integrates causal loop and interpretive structural modelling to qualitatively engage experts in probing complexities and interdependencies in risk assessment and this can be adopted in other research fields. Furthermore, the findings provide useful information to TPPP practitioners on the relevance and a way of incorporating systems thinking in the evaluation of project risks. Thus, practitioners can trace the causality paths of projects risks which will improve the effectiveness of allocation and mitigation decisions. The hierarchical structuring of the risks can also enable prioritisation decisions. Lastly, the study proposes that practitioners pay particular attention and keep records of risk occurrences and their causes or triggers during project delivery to inform the application of this method as a guide to the execution of new or future projects.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, methodology, investigation and writing B.T.B.E.; supervision and reviewing A.P.C.C. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research is fully funded by the research Grant Council (RGC) in Hong Kong under the Hong Kong Ph.D. fellowship scheme.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Available upon request from corresponding author.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A

def transitiveClosure (initial_reachability_matrix):
   result = ““
   length = len(matrix)
   for k in range(0, length):
       for row in range(0, length):
         for col in range(0, length):
            matrix[row] [col] = matrix[row][col] or (matrix[row][k] and matrix[k][col])
             result += (“\n W” + str(k) +” is: \n” + str(matrix).replace(“],” “] \n”) + “\n”)
                  result += (“\n Transitive closure is \n” + str(matrix).replace(“],” “]\n”))
                   print (result)
                    return result
                   transitiveClosure (A) i.e., final reachability matrix

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Figure 1. Summary of Methodology.
Figure 1. Summary of Methodology.
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Figure 2. Example of B and R loop in CLDs. Source: Roubík et al., 2020 [69].
Figure 2. Example of B and R loop in CLDs. Source: Roubík et al., 2020 [69].
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Figure 3. ISM-CLD Approach.
Figure 3. ISM-CLD Approach.
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Figure 4. Hierarchical ISM Diagram.
Figure 4. Hierarchical ISM Diagram.
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Figure 5. MICMAC Analysis of risk factors.
Figure 5. MICMAC Analysis of risk factors.
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Figure 6. Causal Loop Diagram of Risk factors.
Figure 6. Causal Loop Diagram of Risk factors.
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Figure 7. Scenario 1: Project cost overrun risk path.
Figure 7. Scenario 1: Project cost overrun risk path.
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Figure 8. Scenario 2: Delayed project schedule risk path.
Figure 8. Scenario 2: Delayed project schedule risk path.
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Figure 9. Scenario 3: Project performance and quality risk path.
Figure 9. Scenario 3: Project performance and quality risk path.
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Table 1. Risk factors in PPPs.
Table 1. Risk factors in PPPs.
IDRisk FactorsABCDEFGHIJKLMNO
R1Bribery and corruption* * * * **
R2Government or Political Instability* * ** * **
R3Weak regulatory framework and policy monitoring* * ** *
R4Project Cost overrun*** * *** ****
R5Public opposition to the project**** * * *** *
R6Unfavourable host country economy * * * *
R7Inadequate or lengthy negotiation** * * *
R8High cost of operation and maintenance* * * * ****
R9Poor/lengthy public decision-making process ** * * **
R10Expropriation and nationalization of assets* * ** **
R11Legal and regulatory changes* * ** ****
R12Force Majeure Risk*** * * ****
R13Foreign exchange risks* * * ** ***
R14Poor contract design and management*** * * *
R15The inability of the concessionaire * * *
R16Poor project feasibility studies *
R17Unproven engineering techniques* * * * *
R18Cultural and communication risk* * *
R19High project finance* * ********
R20Delayed project Schedule**** * * ***
R21Dispute between project’s participants* * ***
R22Obsolete technology, Change in technology*** **
R23Inadequate supporting infrastructure ** * *
R24Trade restrictions * *
R25Project performance and Quality risk** * * *
R26Inadequate PPP/PFI experience** *
R27Poor sharing of risk and responsibilities* *
R28Weather conditions* * * *
R29Poor workmanship quality and standards* * * *
R30Market demand changes *** * *******
R31Delay in financial closure* *
R32Environmental risks** * * ** *
R33Land acquisition* *** **** **
* references [14,32,36,39,40,42,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51] Key: A = Babatunde et al. (2019), B = Chou and Pramudawardhani (2015), C = Ameyaw and Chan (2015); D = Nguyen et al. (2018), E = Abednego & Ogunlana (2006), F = Rebeiz (2012), G = Choi (2010), H = Ahmad et al. (2018), I = Wibowo & Mohamed (2010), J = Alireza et al. (2014), K = Mazher et al. (2018), L = Almarri et al. (2019), M = Yu et al. (2018), N = Osei-Kyei and Chan (2017), O = Ibrahim et al. (2006).
Table 2. Profile of Experts.
Table 2. Profile of Experts.
ExpertExperienceProfession/Job PositionNo. of ProjectsProject TypesCountries of Work
Public Sector (procurement authorities, PPP units or agencies, ministries, local government)
A11 yearsAdministrator/Projects manager15 to 20Transport, housingGhana
B11 yearsQuantity Surveyor12 to 15TransportTanzania & Nigeria
C15 yearsProjects managerOver 15Transport, energyGhana & South Africa
D19 yearsAdministrative head/contracts manager23 to 30TransportNigeria
E22 yearsCivil engineerOver 20Transport & oil and gasNigeria
F16 yearsConsultant (QS)Over 15Transport, energyGhana, Angola
Private Sector (Sino state-owned construction and engineering corporations)
G17 yearsEngineer30 to 40Transport & EnergyNigeria, Kenya, Angola, Togo & Ethiopia
H15 yearsConstruction Manager30 to 40Transport, Energy & waterGhana & Nigeria
I11 yearsProject Manager40 to 45TransportSouth Africa, Nigeria, Ghana & Kenya
b13 yearsEngineer20 to 30Transport, water & housingIvory Coast, Congo & Ghana
Academic researcher (universities)
K10 yearsReaderN/ATransport, housing and energyUnited Kingdom
L16 yearsAssociate ProfessorN/ATransport, housing & waterGhana
M17 yearsAssociate ProfessorN/ATransportNigeria
Table 3. Risk Factors in Sino-Africa TPPPs.
Table 3. Risk Factors in Sino-Africa TPPPs.
IDRisksDelineation
R1Bribery and corruptionFraudulent and opportunistic actions of either party especially during the procurement process which affect other project attributes such as cost and quality.
R2Government or Political InstabilityChanges and interference of government that negatively affects the smooth running and sometimes abandonment of the project.
R3Regulatory framework and policy monitoring riskWeak or lack of regulations and well-structured government institutions to effectively oversee Sino infrastructure investments in the region despite its uniqueness.
R4Force Majeure RiskEvents of nature beyond the control of either party affecting the obligatory duties of either or both project actors.
R5Public opposition to the projectResistance and lack of support from the local community due to the absence of inclusiveness in project planning and execution as well as public displeasure with project due to cultural and social impact.
R6Unfavourable host country economyThe instability and unhealthy financial systems and low purchasing power that limit the investment friendliness thereby affecting the project cash flow.
R7Cultural and communication riskThe differences in culture and communication dimensions which may result in limited interaction or misinterpretation of project information and tasks.
R8High cost of operation and maintenanceThe increase in the cost of the day-to-day administration of the public facility.
R9Market demand changesThese pertain to the changes in the market niche for public service provided which may be due to faulty projections, needs analysis, or service quality.
R10Inadequate supporting infrastructureThe projects sometimes require some systems or existing structures to function well, e.g., Linking roads in transport projects.
R11Legal and regulatory changesChanges in law or legislation in relation to taxes and industrial practices.
R12Project performance and Quality riskThe inability of the infrastructure to meet expectation and quality performance standards.
R13Environmental risksThe effects of the project on the environment such as air, water, waste, land, and noise pollution.
R14Poor contract design and managementContract ambiguities, faulty and inconsistent contract agreements, and partnership dealings which may harm communication in project execution.
R15Project Cost overrunThe inability to execute and operate projects within budget attributable to faulty financial forecasts and economic environment.
R16Poor project feasibility studiesInability to efficiently determine the socio-economic viability of the project through errors in needs assessments.
R17Poor/lengthy public decision-making processInadequate or lengthy negotiation in the contract closure due to conflict of interests and unbalanced bargaining strength and ability of either party.
R18High project financeThe risk of investing owing to the high cost of borrowing amid uncertainties in the investment climate of most developing economies.
R19Land acquisitionDelays in gaining access to the site or land unavailability issues that may affect project commencement and construction activities.
R20Foreign exchange risksThe fluctuation and poor performance of local currency against foreign currencies which may pose limitations on imports.
R21Poor sharing of risk and responsibilitiesFailure to effectively allocate risks, responsibilities, and authorities prior to commencement leading to the dire consequence of mismanagement.
R22Delayed project ScheduleThe inability to meet the agreed contract period for project execution.
Table 4. Structural Self-Interaction Matrix (SSIM).
Table 4. Structural Self-Interaction Matrix (SSIM).
R22R21R20R19R18R17R16R15R14R13R12R11R10R9R8R7R6R5R4R3R2R1
R1VVOAVOOVXOVOOOVOXAOAAX
R2VOOVOVOVOOVXVOOVVVOXX
R3VVOOVOOVVOVXOOVVOOAX
R4VOVVVOVVOOVOOOVOOOX
R5XAOVAVOVOAXAAVOOOX
R6OOXOVOOVOOXAVVVOX
R7VVOOOVOOXOVOOOOX
R8AOAOXOAXOOXAAXX
R9OOAOVOAVOAXAAX
R10VOOVVOOVOOVOX
R11VOOOVVOVVOVX
R12AAAOAOAAAAX
R13OOOVOOAOOX
R14VVOOVAAVX
R15XAAOXAAX
R16VOOAOOX
R17VVOOOX
R18OOAAX
R19VOOX
R20OOX
R21VX
R22X
Table 5. Initial Reachability Matrix.
Table 5. Initial Reachability Matrix.
R1R2R3R4R5R6R7R8R9R10R11R12R13R14R15R16R17R18R19R20R21R22
R11000010100010110010011
R21110111001110010101001
R31110001100110110010011
R40011000100010011011101
R51000100010010010101001
R61000010111010010010100
R70000001000010100100011
R81000000110010010010000
R90000000110010010010000
R100000100111010010011001
R110110110110110110110001
R120000110110010000000000
R130000100010011000001000
R141000001000010110010011
R150000000100010010010001
R160000000110011111000001
R170000000000000110100011
R180000100100010010010000
R190000000000000001011001
R200000010110010010010100
R210000100000010010000011
R220000100100010011000001
Table 6. Final Reachability Matrix.
Table 6. Final Reachability Matrix.
R1R2R3R4R5R6R7R8R9R10R11R12R13R14R15R16R17R18R19R20R21R22Driving
R1100011111101111111111118
R2111011111111111111111121
R3111011111111111111111121
R4111111111111111111111122
R5100011111101111111111118
R6100011111101111111111118
R7100011111101111111111118
R8100011111101111111111118
R9100011111101111111111118
R10100011111101111111111118
R11111011111111111111111121
R12100011111101111111111118
R13100011111101111111111118
R14100011111101111111111118
R15100011111101111111111118
R16100011111101111111111118
R17100011111101111111111118
R18100011111101111111111118
R19100011111101111111111118
R20100011111101111111111118
R21100011111101111111111118
R22100011111101111111111118
Dependence2244122222222222242222222222222222222222
Table 7. Level partitioning.
Table 7. Level partitioning.
RiskReachability SetAntecedent SetIntersection SetLevel
Level 1
R11,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22I
R21,2,3,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,222,3,4,112,3,11
R31,2,3,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,222,3,4,112,3,11
R41,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,2244
R51,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R61,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R71,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R81,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R91,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R101,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R111,2,3,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,222,3,4,112,3,4,11
R121,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R131,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R141, 5,6,7,8,9,10, 12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R151,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R161,5,6,7,8,9,10, 12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R171,5,6,7,8,9,10, 12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R181,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R191,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R201,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R211,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
R221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,221,5,6,7,8,9,10,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,18,20,21,22I
Level 2
R22,3, 112,3,4,112,3,11II
R32,3,112,3,4,112,3,11II
R42,3,4, 1144
R112,3,112,3,4,112,3,11II
Level 3
R4444III
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Eshun, B.T.B.; Chan, A.P.C. An Evaluation of Project Risk Dynamics in Sino-Africa Public Infrastructure Delivery; A Causal Loop and Interpretive Structural Modelling Approach (ISM-CLD). Sustainability 2021, 13, 10822. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910822

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Eshun BTB, Chan APC. An Evaluation of Project Risk Dynamics in Sino-Africa Public Infrastructure Delivery; A Causal Loop and Interpretive Structural Modelling Approach (ISM-CLD). Sustainability. 2021; 13(19):10822. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910822

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Eshun, Bridget Tawiah Badu, and Albert P.C. Chan. 2021. "An Evaluation of Project Risk Dynamics in Sino-Africa Public Infrastructure Delivery; A Causal Loop and Interpretive Structural Modelling Approach (ISM-CLD)" Sustainability 13, no. 19: 10822. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910822

APA Style

Eshun, B. T. B., & Chan, A. P. C. (2021). An Evaluation of Project Risk Dynamics in Sino-Africa Public Infrastructure Delivery; A Causal Loop and Interpretive Structural Modelling Approach (ISM-CLD). Sustainability, 13(19), 10822. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131910822

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