Abstract

Kenyan population increased from 20 million in 1985 to approximately 47.6 million in 2019 and with it, demand for justice also increased yet the growth did not come with improved Judiciary infrastructure. This attracted the World Bank through the Judicial Performance Improvement Project (JPIP) to fund 30 major court construction projects while the Kenyan Government also funded another 33 such projects from 2013. However, by January, 2020,only 10 projects had been completed and successfully handed over with all the 63 projects being out of the planned time and with variation on the original scope of works.This gave rise to this study that aimed to evaluate the influence of user involvement on implementation of building construction projects in the Kenyan judiciary as moderated with the procurement practices. The study was based on general systems theory. Pragmatism paradigm and convergent parallel mixed research design was adopted and proportionate stratified sampling was used to select a population of 234 consisting of judiciary staff, construction staff and consultants .Primary data was collected through use of questionnaires, interviews and document content analysis. Reliability was tested using Cronbach’s Alpha while data was analyzed using descriptive statistics which included measures of central tendency. Qualitative data was subjected to thematic analysis to triangulate results derived from quantitative data. Inferential statistics was analyzed by correlation, simple linear regression and multiple regression analysis. Two hypotheses were tested to establish whether there were significant relationships between project delivery attributes and implementation of building construction projects in the Kenyan Judiciary, namely 1.H 0 : User Involvement has no significant relationship with implementation of construction projects in the Kenyan Judiciary and 2.H 0 : There is a significant moderating influence of procurement practices on the relationship between user involvement and implementation of building construction projects in the Kenyan Judiciary. The findings were that there was a significant influence of user involvement on the implementation of construction projects in the Kenyan Judiciary and that procurement practices significantly moderated the relationship between user involvement and implementation of building construction projects in the Kenyan Judiciary. The slope coefficient was significant when p ≤0.05. The findings of the study will be beneficial to policy makers, project managers in public and private sectors and scholars regarding project delivery attributes on implementation of building construction projects. Keywords: User involvement, Procurement Practices and Implementation of Building Construction Projects. DOI: 10.7176/EJBM/13-18-12 Publication date: September 30 th 2021

Highlights

  • Project Implementation is an area of great concern to all stakeholders due to the immense resources committed to projects

  • 5.Conclusions The first objective assessed the influence of user involvement on the implementation of building construction projects in Kenyan Judiciary

  • The study findings indicate that User involvement significantly influence the implementation of building construction projects in Kenyan Judiciary

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Project Implementation is an area of great concern to all stakeholders due to the immense resources committed to projects. Project Implementation (Project Performance) is the expectation of all stakeholders concerned. Existing statistics on project implementation has recorded 90% failure rate of major construction projects (Deloitte, 2017). In United Kingdom, construction projects are characterized by unreliable delivery procedures due to budget and time overruns (Ochieng and Price, 2009). The average World Bank project failure rate is 50% in Africa (Ika, Diall and Thuillier,2011). A thorough literature review was carried out on implementation of building construction projects, project delivery systems and procurement practices with the aim of addressing the objectives of the study. The research instruments were constructed after the objectives were stated and hypothesis formulated. They were tested for validity and reliability. The researcher adhered to ethical issues inclusive of honesty and trust, voluntary participation, privacy, anonymity, disclosure, harm and risk policy

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call