31 research outputs found
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Clivages electoraux en Afrique du Sud: une application de la theorie de Karl Deutsch sur la mobilisation politique
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Geographical preferences and movements
This chapter deals with the geographical preferences and recent migration patterns of respondents. They were asked in which province they would most like to live and, if they had moved in the preceding 12 months, where they had lived before
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Decoding South Africa's 1999 electoral geography
Third biennial international conference of the Society for South African Geographers, Windhoek, Namibia 5-9 July 1999Examines the election results in relation to regional differences in public opinion about government priorities and economic performance during the months prior to the elections
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Moral geographies in the post-apartheid era: attitudinal variations in relation to abortion, same sex sexual relationships and capital punishment
30th Congress of the International Geographical Union from 15 - 20 August 2004 in Glasgow, United Kingdo
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Politics and voting
As in previous surveys, respondents were questioned about their party political loyalties. Fieldworkers said to each respondent "I would like to ask how close or distant you feel towards various political parties and organisations. If you feel close to a party you would support it. If you feel distant you would oppose it." The responses to this question are particularly interesting in the light of shifts in political allegiance that occurred in the June 1999 election, five months before the survey was done
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Introduction and methodology
This chapter is the introduction and provides methodology for the rest of the chapters in the book
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Economic policies
This chapter focuses ion the extent to which public sentiment favours state intervention in the economy, the imposition of higher taxes, and the role of the labour movement, preferential labour recruitment and external trade. Respondents were asked to respond to five statements relating to these issues