Budget Explainer, Help & Tips
-
Understanding Jamaica’s National Budget
-
How Public Money Becomes Community Services
-
Accountability & Citizen Participation
- What Is Government Accountability?
- The Role of Citizens in Accountability
- Why Reporting Community Issues Matters
- How Citizen Feedback Improves Public Services
- Why Evidence Matters in Accountability
- Understanding Community-Level Accountability
- Why Collective Reporting Is More Effective
- Following Up on Community Issues
- Why Civic Engagement Matters for Young People
- What Makes a Community Issue a Priority?
- Respectful Engagement with Public Authorities
- Building Trust Through Participation
-
Key Accountability Institutions
-
Access to Public Information
-
Using GovWatch JA
- What Is GovWatch JA?
- When Should You Submit a Report?
- What Makes a Strong Community Report?
- What Happens to Data Submitted by Citizens?
- What Is a Community Scorecard?
- Digital Tools and Modern Accountability
- Privacy Policy
- Terms of Use
- How GovWatch Ja Builds Community, Credibility and Local Moderation
-
Ethics & Safety
-
Educational Videos
- What does "Value for Money" really mean in Government spending?
- Owner Employers and Financiers
- Hector's (All Citizens') Dilemma
- Who are Parliamentary Backbenchers?
- Parliamentary Committees PAC & PAAC
- Account a Meter Tutorial
- The Auditor General's Freedom, Power and Rights
- How Jamaica's Auditor General Protects Our Future
- Citizens Right to Access Information
- Jamaica's National Budget Cycle
- FOUR PARLIAMENTARY ACCOUNTABILITY TOOLS
- Asset Declaration for Parliamentarians - Jamaica
- Constituency Development Fund Process
- How a Bill Becomes Law in Jamaica
< All Topics
Print
Programmes vs Projects: What’s the Difference?
Posted
Updated
Bythegovwatchjawebsite
0 out of 5 stars
| 5 Stars | 0% | |
| 4 Stars | 0% | |
| 3 Stars | 0% | |
| 2 Stars | 0% | |
| 1 Stars | 0% |
A programme is an ongoing government activity, such as road maintenance, waste collection, or public health services. These are continuous and funded year after year.
A project is a specific, time-bound activity, such as constructing a school, repairing a bridge, or upgrading a facility. Projects usually have a start and end date.
Many community concerns relate to programmes rather than projects. Citizens do not need to know which category an issue falls under before reporting it.
Was this article helpful?
0 out of 5 stars
| 5 Stars | 0% | |
| 4 Stars | 0% | |
| 3 Stars | 0% | |
| 2 Stars | 0% | |
| 1 Stars | 0% |
5
Table of Contents
