2,550 research outputs found

    Reinvoking the past in the present: changing identities and appropriations of Joshua Nkomo in post-colonial Zimbabwe

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    This article discusses the histories, narratives and representations that have been produced by and on former ZAPU leader and Vice-President of Zimbabwe, Joshua Nkomo. We focus on the multiple identities and subject positions that Nkomo came to inhabit in the way in which he was represented in ZANU-PF’s discourse of the early 1980s; his self-representation in Nkomo’s 1984 autobiography Nkomo: the story of my life and subsequent appropriations of Nkomo by different political actors in the early 2000s. In line with Stuart Hall’s 1996 description, we consider identities not as essentialist and fixed categories but as positional, multiple, constantly evolving and constructed through difference. We argue that the changing identities of Nkomo served the purposes and interests of a variety of political actors, ranging from the ruling party ZANU-PF to the opposition MDC. Against the background of a mushrooming of popular historical narratives evidenced by both the publication and republishing of biographies, autobiographies and significant reports, and the serialisation and recirculation of these texts in newspapers and through websites, we also argue that the many uses and appropriations of Nkomo demonstrate the continued relevance of the past in the power struggles waged by different political actors in Zimbabwe

    An analysis of coverage of gender-based violence, sourcing patterns and representation of victims in Sowetan, January-March 2008

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    A research report submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, School of Language and Literature Studies, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Media Studies 18 August 2014Despite its pervasiveness, gender-based violence is one of the least talked about violations of women’s rights as most of it takes place within the private domain and is never reported (Gender Links 2002). Gender-based violence is mostly common at family and community level and mostly affects women (Omarjee, 2006). Family attitudes and pressures ensure that this remains hidden from the outside world (IPS, 2009). People Opposing Women Abuse (POWA South Africa) estimates that only one in nine gender-based violence incidences are reported. Violence against women continues partly because women do not seem to acknowledge violence perpetrated against them and are unlikely to seek help when it occurs (Rasool, 2002). The Noord taxi rank ‘miniskirt’ incident, as it came to be known, exposed the sad realities of gender-based violence in contemporary South Africa. In February 2008, a 25 year old woman was sexually harassed for wearing a miniskirt at the Noord Taxi Rank. This incident, described by Nyar (2008) as degrading and shocking, is part of the fabric of South African life. The way that media represents gender-based violence has a significant role to play in curbing this social ill. Sadly, media often emphasise the need for women to be extra vigilant when moving around at night. This in essence is saying that women should take responsibility for the fact that they may be attacked at any time (Gqola, 1997). This scrutiny is also reflected in the way that media have also questioned the morals of victims of gender-based violence especially rape (Carter and Weaver, 2003). This study analysed Sowetan’s daily media output for the months of January to March 2008 to establish patterns in coverage of gender-based violence, sourcing and representation of victims. Key words Gender, gender-based violence, victims, feminist theory, patriarchy, power, media, representation, sourcin

    The emergence and development of 'Beautiful Things' craft project in the inner city of Johannesburg

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    Abstract: The emergence and development of tourism attractions in inner cities throughout the world has given rise to a number of scholarly debates in the academic study of urban tourism. While academic scholarship in the field of urban tourism began with the cities of the developed states mostly in the 1980s, the emergence and development of tourism initiatives in the inner cities of the developing states in 1990s has drawn a great deal of attention to the South as well. This research explores the emergence and development of an inner city tourism initiative in the form of a craft project known as Beautiful Things. Beautiful Things is a two-year-old craft project located at Newtown’s Cultural Precinct, in the inner city of Johannesburg. The project was inaugurated at the World Summit on Sustainable Development in August 2002, and has since its relocation to the inner city of Johannesburg in December 2002, contributed significantly to the physical, social and economic regeneration of this area. The study of this project is very important in that it is shedding some light on the role of heritage and cultural industries in rejuvenating declining inner cities. It gives light on how Newtown Cultural Precinct as a whole functions within the inner city of Johannesburg. In spite of this project’s role in the development of the Johannesburg inner city, Beautiful Things has not yet been explored for academic research. This research on Beautiful Things is set to be informative on a number of theoretical issues underpinning the development of urban heritage and cultural tourism in general and the development of tourism in Johannesburg. The findings of the study of Beautiful Things reveal important international trends on the development of heritage and cultural attractions in inner cities and elucidate a number of similarities in the development of tourism policies across the cities of the world. This research begins with a chapter on the international experiences of heritage and cultural tourism developments in inner cities and then follows by a study of Johannesburg’s tourism policy and strategy developments. Both chapters are vital in providing the context under which Beautiful Things came to emerge in the inner city of Johannesburg, performing an important role of regenerating the declining inner city. The last part of this research is an empirical confirmation study of physical, social and economic contributions of Beautiful Things in the inner city of Johannesburg. The research is informed by theories of neo-liberalization, local economic development, and inner city regeneration

    Interactive landscaping: a business development hub for hybrid professionals

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    Designing a building from the inside out is done by “Discovering the kinds of places people need for themselves for their emotional selves to grow and develop and feel safe, for relationships to function effectively.” (Franck, Lepori 2007:98) It is about an internal process of architectural design rather than an external one. Peter Zumthor achieves this in the Thermal Bath Vals when he used ‘the ritual of Bathing’ as a stimulus for design. He took account of the “body’s needs in space, sounds, temperature, that were required at different moments of the design. His explorations were independent of rigid form but right from the beginning there was a feeling of a silent world inside the mountain. In a similar way the design of the Business Development Hub in Zimbabwe resulted from the study and mapping of the ‘rituals’ of the professional’s routes within the facility. The process together with the conducted research was about discovering how architecture can provide environments that aid in professional improvement and through facilities and exposure reintegrate the Hybrid professional back into the economy by playing a large role in supporting professionals in their business venture. My research has lead me to the conclusion that because of the nature in which hybrid professionals conduct their business ventures, what is needed is an architecture that intensifies interaction between professionals and provides them with a platform upon which formal, informal and spontaneous exchange can take place between professionals. The challenge is to design the buildings’ internal fabric to continually act as a stimulator for heightened chance encounters and interaction

    The implementation of sustainable agricultural strategies to alleviate poverty in Topiya village of Emalahleni district municipality in Mpumalanga province

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    A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of requirements for the degree of Master of Science. October 2014.The study seeks to establish how sustainable agriculture can improve livelihoods and consequently alleviate poverty in Topiya community of Mpumalanga Province. The study also entails an investigation into whether the Topiya community is food insecure, and in this instance, how sustainable agriculture can be embraced smoothly to improve the food security status of the Topiya community. The study also seeks to unearth whether raising rural agricultural productivity is sufficient to improve livelihoods or a more robust and multi dimensional approach is needed to improve rural livelihoods in general. A research instrument (questionnaire) was designed and administered to 19 households. The data is analyzed by way of frequencies and percentages. The results yielded by this study demonstrated that Topiya Community is food insecure and a plethora of factors such as but not limited to lack of adequate arable land, lack of farm assets, lack understanding of the concept of sustainable agriculture contributes to this. The results also pointed to the fact that an intrinsic understanding of what sustainable agriculture entails is of paramount importance for the concept to be embraced and achieve the objectives of improving food security and consequently alleviating poverty

    Three dimensional analysis of stress and strain distributions around Bord and Pillar geometries

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    Student Number: 0420801P Master of Science in Engineering. Faculty of Engineering and the Built EnvironmentUnderground observations at a coal mine indicated failure of the immediate roof above the bords while pillars were observed to be intact. To determine the underlying causes of roof failures, careful observations and photographic recording of occurrences of roof failures have been made. Rock samples of the immediate shale roof were collected for laboratory testing to determine the rock strength and deformation properties. Numerical simulations were carried out to analyse stress and strain distributions and also to attempt to explain the guttering process. Mapping of roof failures showed that these took place mainly towards the centre of the roadways. The roof failures, termed “roof guttering”, were observed to occur violently and with little warning. Occurrence of roof guttering had a negative impact on production. Some panels are abandoned, production times have increased and safety of workers is compromised. The mine authorities initially thought that roof guttering was caused by shear failure of the rock mass. Roof bolts are therefore used as a means of primary support. No improvements have been observed. Increasing the size of pillars has not solved the problem either. It has only increased the amount of coal left in the pillars without any improvements in reducing roof failures. Stress measurement results carried out in 2001 showed that high horizontal stresses exist at the mine. The immediate shale roof was observed to be weak. Laboratory testing showed that the shale rock is transversely isotropic. Numerical modelling results indicated that there are insignificant stress concentrations towards the centre of the roadway using the elastic and transversely isotropic elastic models. Stress concentrations were predicted at the roof-pillar contact area. It is therefore expected that failure should initiate and occur at the roof-pillar contact area. The Mohr-Coulomb and Mohr-Coulomb strain softening models predicted shear failure at the roof-pillar contact area. The two models over predicted the depth and under predicted the width of failures. The extension strain criterion predicted correctly the depth and width of failures although the failures were predicted at the roof-pillar contact area while the observations indicated failure mainly towards the centre of the roads. Initiation of failure was predicted ahead of the coal face at the centre of the road position using the extension strain criterion. Although none of the constitutive behaviours predicted correctly the observed underground failures the extension strain criterion has shown the best agreement. Guttering that occurred at the roof-pillar contact was modelled successfully using the extension strain criterion. The extension strain criterion predicted initiation of failure ahead of the coal face at the road centre position. It is possible that fracture initiation could be taking place in this location ahead of the coal face, and, on blasting the rock that has been fractured falls forming a gutter at the centre of the road

    “African solutions to African problems.” challenges in implementing African mechanisms in transforming conflict: selected case studies (2007 to 2016)

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    Masters Degree. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban.The study is premised on the understanding that African conflict challenges have been consistent and seem rather unending even after attempted peace, due to the application of external solutions. Hence, the research is built on the argument that African solutions to African conflict challenges lie within her own bosom. This research acknowledges the existence of other useful external solutions but argues that these solutions should not take precedence in addressing African conflict challenges as identified in most cases. In this light, this study adhered to the objective of clarifying perspectives around the notion of ASAP and its importance in developing effective mechanisms that are localized and indigenous in addressing African conflict challenges. The study traces the concept of ASAP to the ideals of Pan-Africanism and outlines how it is an important cause to pursue if effective peace and security are to be established in Africa’s conflict-ridden societies. The study utilizes conflict transformation and positive peace theories as a measure to bring understanding to the various dynamics of conflict, understanding the diversity of society and also promote alternative thinking as vital components in addressing African conflicts. The study employs the use of case studies (of Somalia, Darfur and Burundi) which provided three unique backdrops which exposed different variations in peace approaches. They exposed the weaknesses and strengths that are encountered in addressing typical African challenges. There are also various traditional and indigenous societal tools that are identified in these communities that can be key in addressing conflict which has often been neglected or undermined because they do not exist in the guidelines of liberal peace structures. The adoption of hybrid peace meant the promotion of the bridging of top-down and bottom-up approaches, encourage inclusive peace initiatives between external and local/indigenous peace approaches and to ensure that there is local ownership of peace processes which allows sustainable peace. However, the study identifies that the challenge of hybrid paternalism replaced liberal peace frameworks such that localized/ indigenous peace mechanisms and the effect of ASAP remain undermined. The implementation of the peace processes examined still exposes huge limitations and setbacks. This research concludes that despite the existence and adoption of a perfect platform, ASAP as a mechanism remains far from being a reality and the role of indigenous peace is still undermined in practice

    Access to financial services: towards an understanding of the role and impact of financial exclusion in Sub-Saharan Africa

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    This thesis investigates the nature and extent of financial inclusion in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). It sequentially investigates this in three related studies. The first study examines the impact of access to finance on poverty, while the second investigates the extent to which cross-country structural and macroeconomic variations contribute to the observed variations in the levels of financial inclusion. Finally, because both financial inclusion and financial stability have been embraced as key policy initiatives over the past decade, the third study examines the nature of relationship between these two policy goals. The first paper uses household-level data from FinScope Surveys conducted in eight SSA countries between 2014 and 2015 to examine the impact of access to finance on household wealth. The few studies which have looked at this relationship in the past apply a linear estimation and thus inadvertently assume a uniform distribution across all levels of poverty. This study examines the heterogeneous impact of access to finance along the entire wealth distribution line using a Re-centered Influence Function (RIF) regression model. Further, to eliminate potential endogeneity, an instrumental variable quantile approach is implemented. Results from both estimations indicate that the unconditional effect of access to finance on poverty is non-monotonic. For most of the countries, the effect is highest at the median level, and very low at the bottom of the wealth index. This suggests that the extension of formal financial services disproportionately benefits the middle-class more than the very-poor and rich categories. The second paper uses macroeconomic data obtained from various World Bank databases over the period 2004-2014 to examine the extent to which the observed cross-country variations in financial inclusion are mirrored by country-specific structural and macroeconomic characteristics. To conceptualize, the study uses a benchmark model to establish the optimal level of financial inclusion given the country's fundamentals, and thus provide a meaningful cross-country comparison. The key structural and policy factors that determine the extent of the gap between the actual and predicted levels of access to finance are analysed via a fixed-effects model based on selected SSA countries. The results suggest the existence of a gap in access to finance within the region, compared to their potential. The gap is wider in banking systems with high concentration, low proportion of foreign banks and poor economic conditions. The final paper empirically examines the theoretical ambiguity between financial inclusion and stability. Theory provides conflicting views on whether the two are complimentary, or mutually exclusive. This paper examines this dynamic relationship via a system-GMM panel estimation model using a panel of 40 countries from the SSA region over the period 2004-2014, while controlling for both bank-specific and macroeconomic-wide factors. The results indicate that financial inclusion has a positive impact on bank stability, however, high market power within the banking systems and poor institutional framework tends to undermine the impact of financial inclusion on stability. Overall, the results provide evidence that the existing portfolio of formal financial services does not provide sustainable solutions to poverty eradication in terms of meeting the unique needs of the poorer members of the societies. This ultimately widens the gap between the poorest and the middle-class which further complicates the poverty structure. Therefore, there is a need for more investment on improving both the range of existing product offering and the financial capabilities of the poor, in order to improve their participation in financial markets. Demand-side policies should focus on increasing the bankable population by improving both awareness and usage of financial services and products. Supply-side policies should seek to eliminate market frictions by reducing concentration levels, improve competiveness through relaxation of entry restrictions, and opening the market to foreign institutes and non-banking players, and thus improve innovation in both new products offering and service delivery. This work further argues that financial inclusion is not only a developmental or welfare issue, but has positive ramifications on the banking system. Therefore, to be effective financial inclusion policies should adopt a market systems approach to development, which recognizes the importance of support structures and seek to benefit the poor by incentivizing service providers to improve product quality, variety and returns, and thus create value throughout the value chain. An effective approach should also embrace the role of macro-prudential regulatory and supervisory framework, as an indispensable tool, not only in governing the behavior of financial services providers, but because of its efficacy in building consumer confidence- a key element for increased access and usage of financial services

    Health care providers' experience of research activities in public sector health facilities in the Western Cape Province of South Africa

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    There is a significant amount of public health research conducted within provincial health facilities in South Africa, whose findings have a positive impact on the delivery of health services. This includes clinical, epidemiological, health systems and health services research, often initiated by post‐graduate students, independent academics researchers, as well as research institutions. Although researchers commonly commit to providing feedback to the provincial department and facilities, there is little evidence to confirm that research feedback is subsequently provided. Little contextualized empirical evidence is available to guide action, particularly for frontline health care providers, who often have the responsibility to host these research activities. The aim of this study was to explore the experiences of healthcare providers with research activities hosted in health facilitiesin the Western Cape province of South Africa. A mixed-method, cross-sectional study was conducted utilising an online survey (n= 19), and semi-structured interviews (n=3) with frontline health care providers (research gatekeepers). Descriptive analyses characterized respondents and their experience of research. Qualitative thematic analysis took on an inductive approach by identifying themes as they emerged from the data and cross comparing these with findings from the scoping literature review. Findings provided insight into how research conduct is experienced by those on the frontline in public health facilities on the provincial district platform. This is particular to the Western Cape province, which has a specific health department administration system. The following themes emerged: perception of research burden on services, understanding of the research approval process, autonomy to deny researchers access to the health facility due to overburden of research, the frequency or occurrence of research feedback after completion of a project, and interpersonal dynamics between researchers and gatekeepers as it relates to research conduct in facilities. This research reports on empirical evidence of perspectives from frontline health care providers on their experience with health research in a particular provincial context. The findings could form the basis of a study with a much larger sample size to inform how research feedback can be translated in a way that directly impacts on the uptake in the frontline
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