25,724 research outputs found
Learning from local economic development experiences: Observations on Integrated Development Programmes of the Free State, Republic of South Africa
The aim of this paper is to assess the degree to which the components of the Rural Economic and Enterprise Development (REED) framework have been incorporated into integrated development planning (IDP) or into strategic local economic development (LED) plans. The paper also provides an evaluation of two local municipal level IDPs in the Free State, Republic of South Africa. The evaluation is considered on an ex-ante basis in terms of contemporary LED and REED approaches. We also consider IDP efficacy and potential impact in terms of achieving enterprise development, poverty reduction and growth.Rural Economic and Enterprise Development, economic development,
Including Women? (Dis)junctures Between Voice,
Abstract Integrated development plans (IDPs) are municipal strategic plans designed
to bring about developmental local government. They have been criticised for
providing insufficient space for democratic participation. This paper explores the
extent to which a marginalised group—women—has been incorporated into the IDP
process, in response to three questions. First, how have IDP participatory processes
incorporated women’s voice, and are the new participatory spaces realising their
transformative potential? Secondly, how have women’s interests and a gender
perspective been mainstreamed in the IDP, and has it promoted transformation? And
finally, at the interface between officials and women themselves, how are IDP projects
implemented and does agency promote or impede the goals of gender equality? A
study of three KwaZulu-Natal municipalities reveals some achievements, but unequal
gender relations have not been transformed. These case studies demonstrate some of
the complexities and difficulties in the practice of democratic governance
Platinum City and the New South African Dream
Much has been written about the persistence of economic apartheid inscribed on the geography of South Africa’s cities. This has intensified fragmentation, producing spatial configurations that are at once reminiscent of the old order of segregation, and simultaneously embody the particular inequities and divisions of the new neoliberal order (Turok 2001, Harrison 2006). Through an ethnographic study of Rustenburg, the urban hub of South Africa’s platinum belt, (once labelled the ‘fastest growing city in Africa’ after Cairo) I explore how the failure of urban integration maps onto the failure of the promise of market inclusion. What is particular about mid-range towns such as Rustenburg, is that the opportunities of ‘empowerment through enterprise’ are seen, or believed to be, all the more attainable than in large cities. Here the extended supply chains of the mining industry and the expanding secondary economy appear to offer limitless possibilities to share in the boons of the platinum boom. Yet as the account below shows, the disjuncture (and friction) between corporate authority and local government, has given rise to increasing fragmentation and exclusion, as only a very few are able to grasp the long-anticipated rewards of the new South African dream
On the Geometrical Structure of Covariant Anomalies in Yang-Mills Theory
Covariant anomalies are studied in terms of the theory of secondary
characteristic classes of the universal bundle of Yang-Mills theory. A new set
of descent equations is derived which contains the covariant current anomaly
and the covariant Schwinger term. The counterterms relating consistent and
covariant anomalies are determined. A geometrical realization of the
BRS/anti-BRS algebra is presented which is used to understand the relationship
between covariant anomalies in different approaches.Comment: 19 pages, LMU-TPW 92-31 (January 93
Managing Access to Service Providers in Federated Identity Environments: A Case Study in a Cloud Storage Service
© 2015 IEEE. Currently the diversity of services, which are adhering to Identity Federation, has raised new challenges in the area. Increasingly, service providers need to control the access to their resources by users from the federation as, even though the user is authenticated by the federation, its access to resources cannot be taken for granted. Each Service Provider (SP) of a federation implements their own access control mechanism. Moreover, SPs might need to allow different access control granularity. For instance, all users from a particular Identity Provider (IdP) may access the resources due to some financial agreement. On the other hand, it might be the case that only specific users, or groups of users, have access to the resources. This paper proposes a solution to this problem through a hierarchical authorization system. Our approach, which can be customized to different SPs, allows the SP administrator to manage which IdPs, or users, have access to the provided resources. In order to demonstrate the feasibility of our approach, we present a case study in the context of a cloud storage solution
“Pilot implementation of an interdisciplinary course on climate solutions”
A pilot implementation of an experimental interdisciplinary course on climate solutions was undertaken at San Jose´ State University in the fall semester of 2008. The course, co-taught by seven faculty members from six colleges, was approved for a general education requirement and was open to upperclass students campus-wide. A course with such a breadth of topics and range of student backgrounds was the first of its kind here. The lessons learned from the pilot effort were assessed from student, faculty, and administrative perspectives. The educational benefits to students from the interdisciplinary format were found to be substantial, in addition to faculty development. However, challenges associated with team-teaching were also encountered and must be overcome for the long-term viability of the course. The experimental course was approved as a permanent course starting in the fall semester of 2009 based on the pilot effort, and plays a role in the College of Engineering’s recent initiatives in sustainability in addition to campus-wide general educatio
GridCertLib: a Single Sign-on Solution for Grid Web Applications and Portals
This paper describes the design and implementation of GridCertLib, a Java
library leveraging a Shibboleth-based authentication infrastructure and the
SLCS online certificate signing service, to provide short-lived X.509
certificates and Grid proxies. The main use case envisioned for GridCertLib, is
to provide seamless and secure access to Grid/X.509 certificates and proxies in
web applications and portals: when a user logs in to the portal using
Shibboleth authentication, GridCertLib can automatically obtain a Grid/X.509
certificate from the SLCS service and generate a VOMS proxy from it. We give an
overview of the architecture of GridCertLib and briefly describe its
programming model. Its application to some deployment scenarios is outlined, as
well as a report on practical experience integrating GridCertLib into portals
for Bioinformatics and Computational Chemistry applications, based on the
popular P-GRADE and Django softwares.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figure; final manuscript accepted for publication by the
"Journal of Grid Computing
The GLASS project: supporting secure shibboleth-based single sign-on to campus resources
Higher and Further education institutions in the UK are in the process of migrating their IT infrastructures to exploit Shibboleth technologies for federated access management. Ease of use and secure access are paramount to the successful uptake of these technologies, both from the end user and system administrator perspective. The JISC-funded GLASS project is a one-year project investigating the use of Shibboleth to support single sign-on to a variety of campus resources at the University of Glasgow including browser-based email access; the Moodle online virtual learning environment; the WebSURF online student records facility, and a network filestore browser. This paper describes the implementation issues and experiences gained in rolling out the Shibboleth technologies to support federated access management
Programme of action research to inform the evaluation of the additional learning needs pilot : interim report on the costs of the statutory reform of special educational needs provision
- …
