185 results
Search Results
2. Sustainable industrialization in Africa: the localization of wind-turbine component production in South Africa.
- Author
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Larsen, Thomas Hebo and Hansen, Ulrich Elmer
- Subjects
INDUSTRIALIZATION ,VALUE chains ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,GOVERNMENT policy ,MANUFACTURING industries - Abstract
The increasing investment in renewable energy (RE) in Africa has been accompanied by the establishment of a number of local RE component-manufacturing facilities across various African countries. The local manufacture of RE components presents an interesting opportunity for achieving sustainable industrialization in Africa. However, limited research has been devoted to analysing the factors enabling and impeding the localization of RE component production. In this paper, we analyse the determinant conditions for the localization of wind-turbine component production in South Africa in order to improve the understanding of the opportunities and challenges involved in achieving sustainable industrialization on the continent. Specifically, we explore the role of governance structures in the global value chain (GVC) pertaining to specific components in shaping national policy efforts to encourage the industry's localization. We find that the local production of wind-turbine towers has generally made most progress compared to the localization of blade and nacelle production. Further, we find that the GVC's governance structures may contribute both to impeding and to further accelerating the effect of adopted policies on the industry's localization. The paper concludes by highlighting the significance of the state in promoting local RE manufacturing industries to help achieve sustainable industrialization in Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. COVID-19 Vaccines Development Discord: A Focus on the BRICS and Implications for Africa's Access and Affordability Matters.
- Author
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Nhamo, Godwell
- Subjects
COVID-19 vaccines ,VACCINE development ,LOBBYING ,GEOGRAPHIC information systems ,CRITICAL discourse analysis ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The 17th Sustainable Development Goal seeks to promote partnerships at various levels. To this end, COVID-19 vaccines development partnerships in the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) are inevitable in facilitating ethical access to affordable and safe vaccines the world over. With South Africa being part of the BRICS, its presence can assist in leveraging the partnership to ensure that COVID-19 vaccines developed by the BRICS are efficiently deployed in Africa. Through the tracking of announcements, documents and critical discourse analysis, and Geographical Information Systems, this paper investigates COVID-19 vaccines development collaboration in the BRICS and its implication for Africa. It emerges that there is an inherent discord in the BRICS, with bilateral arrangements both within and outside the forum being evident. This has resulted in advance breakthrough COVID-19 vaccines from China and Russia not widely tried across the BRICS. The paper notes that these developments weaken the global south and affect its potential to develop COVID 19 vaccines. The work recommends a reconsideration in terms of COVID-19 vaccines development and future proofing of collaboration within the BRICS and finding a way of having South Africa continue to lobby for affordable and accessible vaccines for Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Forever foreign? Is there a future for Chinese people in Africa?
- Author
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Park, Yoon Jung
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,EMIGRATION & immigration - Abstract
Chinese migration to Africa has been limited both in size and scope until relatively recently. It was only in the late 1990s and the 2000s that significant numbers of Chinese migrants began arriving in Africa, with the first significant waves hitting South African shores. Chinese entrepreneurs, fortune seekers, and professionals, together with temporary workers – from across China – made their way in increasing numbers to destinations across the African continent. Many entered Africa with or following Chinese state-owned and private companies, on contracts to work on construction, oil, and mining projects. Beyond these large state-sponsored and private-sector projects, reports of the development of Chinatowns, Chinese shops, and Chinese farms and factories across the African continent have been circulating for nearly three decades. This paper examines these new, intensified Chinese flows to Africa and explores the possibilities of their future on the continent. Based on my in-depth examination of developments in South Africa, I argue that while the Chinese state's global ambitions and African ambivalence towards these latest arrivals influence Chinese migrant lives and destinies, the migrants themselves are also having impacts on their African host nations and changing the way we understand human flows. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Negotiating sexual and gender diversity in rural and peri-urban KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
- Author
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Epprecht, Marc and Mngoma, Nomusa
- Subjects
GENDER nonconformity ,MENTAL health ,GENDER identity ,SEXUAL orientation ,SEXUAL rights ,IMPOTENCE - Abstract
A noticeable tendency in the first generation of scholarship on sexual orientation and gender identity/expression (SOGIE) in Africa has been the focus on urban or modern institutional settings. A dominant theme is to document people's struggles against stigma, fear and violence to better inform interventions to strengthen human rights and sexual health for all. In some cases, unintentionally, the impression conveyed of Africa is of a continent with cultures that are uniformly, hostile to SOGIE rights. The present study arises from a large survey among boys and men in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa that problematises that impression. The study revealed unexpectedly high levels of same-sex sexual experience among boys and men in a mostly rural, culturally conservative setting. Following from that revelation, we conducted in-depth interviews to gain insight into their lives. Informants did indeed recount many incidents of discrimination and violence and admitted to sometimes severe emotional health problems. Yet they also spoke of finding love, acceptance, allies, resources, humour and hope for the future. In this paper, we tease out key themes from the interviews in relation to trends in the scholarship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The Politics of the Parallel Archive: Digital Imperialism and the Future of Record-Keeping in the Age of Digital Reproduction.
- Author
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Breckenridge, Keith
- Subjects
ARCHIVES ,DIGITIZATION of archival materials ,DIGITAL libraries ,IMPERIALISM ,PRESERVATION of archival materials ,ACCESS to archives ,INTERNET - Abstract
This paper takes as its subject the fact that digital archival production – of existing materials and born-digital records – has collapsed in contemporary South Africa, and it offers some arguments about why it is important to reverse this process. The current situation can be explained by the fact that digitisation has been widely described as a form of intellectual imperialism, a characterisation that echoes influential strands of postcolonial theory and South African nationalism. The reasons for this unusual understanding lie in the difficult history of the last major digitisation effort, the Mellon-funded collaboration between Aluka and the Digital Imaging Project of South Africa (DISA). The paper reconstructs that project in some detail in an effort to understand what went wrong, arguing that in place of the geopolitical explanation that many participants adopted, most of what went wrong was much more narrowly technological. Yet, the same technological issues have already been great assets to South African researchers, holding out the promise of solutions to some pressing local difficulties of digital preservation and archival assembly. The last section of the paper takes up some of the reasons why scholars need to take digital record-keeping much more seriously than they have to date – chief amongst these being the fertile possibilities of forgery and impersonation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. No separate spheres: the contingent reproduction of living labor in Southern Africa.
- Author
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O'Laughlin, Bridget
- Subjects
SOCIAL reproduction ,APARTHEID ,SPHERES ,DIVISION of labor ,RACE ,SUGARCANE - Abstract
Social Reproduction Theory (SRT) rejects the classical political economy distinction between productive and unproductive labor, the latter defined as all labor that does not produce surplus-value. Rather, much non-commodified labor, particularly that done in the domestic sphere, is not unproductive but necessary since it produces labor-power. Hence, SRT has proposed an alternative distinction: productive versus reproductive spheres of labor. This article argues that this opposition too is analytically and politically misleading. Capital is concerned with profit, not with the reproduction of the living labor within which labor-power is always embedded. It is the everyday struggles of living labor that determines its reproduction. These take place not just in the kin-based sphere of the family but in overlapping, shifting places and processes, including struggles for better wages and working conditions in capitalist firms. This paper uses two different contexts in southern Africa to make this argument: an influential debate over how to understand changes in apartheid in South Africa in the 1970s; and a sugar-cane plantation in Mozambique where interdependent contradictions of class, gender and race defined a social division of labor that systematically compromised the reproduction of living labor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The application of forensic geomorphology in rhinoceros poaching investigations in Africa.
- Author
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de Bruin, Mauritz and Schmitz, P. M. U.
- Subjects
POACHING ,GEOMORPHOLOGY ,RHINOCEROSES - Abstract
South Africa experienced since 2008 high escalations in rhinoceros poaching. It is essential to protect southern Africa's heritage by developing/adapting new research methods and techniques that can assist prosecutors to improve their successes in achieving convictions. The paper aimed to investigate the use of forensic geomorphology in the context of a poached rhino to assist in the prosecution of suspected poachers in the absence of any DNA linkages. Two experimental study sites mimicked the aspects of the landscape in which rhinoceros normally occur. Trace evidence was removed from the suspects that moved through the landscape in order to verify if any significant similarities could be identified against control samples collected at poaching sites and at locations based on the terrain utilized by the poachers during the simulated poaching incident. The paper concluded that a linkage could be recognized between the selected landscape and the collected trace evidence. The results indicate that the first experimental study site illustrated a definite linkage between the suspects and the poaching site, whereas the second experimental study site suggested that there was a possibility that a linkage could be made. This study only used inorganic material such as sand grains to link suspects to scenes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Visual Arts of the Armed Struggle in Southern Africa.
- Author
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Seidman, Judy Ann
- Subjects
NATIONAL liberation movements ,ART ,MILITARY camps ,CULTURE - Abstract
The visual arts were fully represented within the culture of liberation that flourished within South Africa’s liberation movements. However, relatively little has been written about visual arts representing the armed struggle. This paper aims to explore the visual arts created around the armed struggle; and begin to position this within a broader understanding of the culture dynamics that emerged as part of Southern Africa’s liberation movements, and the armed struggle in particular. Most scholars agree that music, poetry and dance were integral cultural expressions within the liberation movements; styles often developed within military camps, then were adopted throughout ‘liberated zones’. In contrast, military structures provided little or no space to practice the visual arts. Active military personal had little time or resources to create visual artworks, no storage and exhibition space, and little access to reproduction or distribution. Visual representation of fighters - both in photographs and realistic portraits - could create a security risk if taken by the enemy. Unlike music and writing, most visual art of the armed struggle was therefore produced within the mass movements, and in solidarity movements supporting the armed struggle. This paper discusses direct (in some cases personal) experiences of problems confronting visual artists of the armed struggle; and solutions artists found for these. It places the failure to recognize the visual art of the armed struggle within a broader failure to explore the integration of armed resistance with cultural practice and belief in the struggle for democratic societies in Southern Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Localising governance in the African city: a grounded model of multiple and contending forms of security governance in Hout Bay, Cape Town.
- Author
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Anciano, Fiona and Piper, Laurence
- Subjects
URBAN renewal ,NETWORK governance ,SECURITY management - Abstract
The paper articulates a model of urban governance, developed through emergent analysis of the rulers, methods, rules and logics evident in the practices of security governance in Hout Bay, Cape Town. Informed by the concept of hybrid governance, this grounded theorising draws on extensive fieldwork on security governance practices in a complex urban neighbourhood to present a model of multiple and sometimes contending forms of governance that include, but are not limited to, bureaucratic, market, developmental, network and informal governance. Our model emerges from a critique of top-down approaches to understanding governance that starts with the state, institutions and law, or approaches that primarily focus on formal partnerships between the state and business or other social partners. The view from above can miss important aspects of how residents are governed 'from below' and informally. Hence it is impossible to understand from the formal, and in advance of grounded research, exactly how many places in urban Africa are governed. Exposing the particular and local forms of governance in urban Africa can support improved forms of service delivery and citizen's experiences of living in their city. In addition, while our model may be relevant in other places, more important is the methodology of identifying the rulers and methods, but especially the rules and logics of practice, to surface the specific, and complex, forms of governance in an urban place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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11. Achieving energy security in Africa: prospects of nuclear energy development in South Africa and Nigeria.
- Author
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Salakhetdinov, Eldar and Agyeno, Oboshi
- Subjects
NUCLEAR energy ,ENERGY development ,ENERGY security ,POWER resources ,NUCLEAR power plants ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ENERGY shortages - Abstract
Africa has rich energy resources but continues to remain an energy poor continent. The industrialization potential of the continent and its rapidly growing population have caused a sharp increase in demand for electricity. South Africa and Nigeria are the biggest economies in Africa with large appetites for energy. South Africa, using its vastly developed and industrial economy, produces about 50 GWe of electricity, the highest of any African country. In contrast, Nigeria produces far less for a population four times the size of its African economic rival, South Africa. Without solving the energy deficit, neither economic growth nor sustainable development and improvement of citizens' welfare will be possible. An effective way to solve the energy shortage may be the introduction of nuclear power plants. Nuclear power is not only able to overcome the electricity deficit in African countries, but can also contribute to a soft transition from environmentally polluting fossil-fuelled power plants to carbon-free technologies. However, for various reasons, there is strong opposition to nuclear energy development in these countries. This paper seeks to answer the question of whether the construction of nuclear power plants in Africa is the optimal solution to the continent's acute energy deficit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Colonised minds? Post-development theory and the desirability of development in Africa.
- Author
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Matthews, Sally
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,PUBLIC demonstrations ,MODERNITY ,SELF-affirmation theory ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
While post-development theory is very concerned with the ways in which development has impacted upon the countries of the Global South, there has been relatively little written on post-development theory from an African perspective. This paper identifies some of the ways in which post-development theory fails to adequately understand the African experience of development. In particular, I explore the difficulty that post-development theory confronts when faced with the continued desire on the part of many people in Africa for development. In his introduction to the new edition ofThe Development Dictionary, Wolfgang Sachs discusses this desire, noting that despite development’s many failures, many still associate the concept with self-affirmation and redress. He explains this continued desire for development as being indicative of the need for the decolonisation of the imagination. In this paper, I show some of the problems with this explanation and present alternative ways of understanding the persistence of the desire for development in Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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13. Counselling and guidance in Africa.
- Author
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Goss, Stephen and Adebowale, Olusegun
- Subjects
VOCATIONAL guidance ,COUNSELING ,SERIAL publications ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
An introduction is provided in which the author discusses articles in the issue on topics including counseling in Africa, prediction of academic success in southwestern Nigeria, and the experiences of college students from Ghana who are studying in Great Britain.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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14. Empowering Leadership and Municipal Service Delivery: A Case Study of a Metropolitan Municipality in South Africa.
- Author
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Govender, Krishna
- Subjects
CITIES & towns ,LEADERSHIP ,MUNICIPAL services ,CUSTOMER relationship management ,PUBLIC sector - Abstract
Since municipal service delivery is a challenge facing many municipalities in South Africa, this paper reports on a study conducted among a convenience sample of managers and employees from the Revenue and Customer Relations Management department of a major metropolitan municipality in South Africa, to address the aforementioned problem. The findings reveal that empowering leadership is strongly correlated with employee work effort, performance and improved service delivery. On the practitioners’ side, the important mediating role of employee work effort and employee performance in the “empowering leadership–improved service delivery” relationship in South Africa’s public sector is also highlighted. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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15. ‘$100 Is Not Much To You’: Open Science and neglected accessibilities for scientific research in Africa.
- Author
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Bezuidenhout, Louise, Kelly, Ann H., Leonelli, Sabina, and Rappert, Brian
- Subjects
INTERNET & economics ,BUSINESS networks ,MEMBERSHIP ,RESEARCH ,ACQUISITION of property ,BIOCHEMISTRY ,COMPUTER software ,COMPUTERS ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,ELECTRONIC publishing ,ENDOWMENT of research ,INTERNET ,INTERVIEWING ,LABORATORIES ,PERSONAL computers ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,PRIORITY (Philosophy) ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH funding ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,EMPLOYEES' workload ,QUALITATIVE research ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,ACCESS to information ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The Open Science (OS) movement promises nothing less than a revolution in the availability of scientific knowledge around the globe. By removing barriers to online data and encouraging publication in Open Access formats and Open Data archives, OS seeks to expand the role, reach and value of research. The promises of OS imply a set of expectations about what different publics hope to gain from research, how accountability and participation can be enhanced, and what makes science public in the first place. This paper presents empirical material from fieldwork undertaken in (bio)chemistry laboratories in Kenya and South Africa to examine the extent to which these ideals can be realized in a sub-Saharan context. To analyse the challenges African researchers face in making use of freely available data, we draw from Amartya Sen’s Capabilities Approach. His theorisations of ‘conversion factors’ helps to understand how seemingly minor economic and social contingencies can hamper the production and (re-)use of online data. In contrast to initiatives that seek to make more data available, we suggest the need to facilitate a more egalitarian engagement with online data resources. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Recurrent themes in isiXhosa songs.
- Author
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Ntshinga, Thabazi
- Subjects
AFRICAN songs ,XHOSA (African people) ,CONTENT analysis ,FUNCTIONAL linguistics ,ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
Scholars who have been writing on the problems of classifying the oral song genres of Africa have tended to be inflexible. The oral song has been approached using functionalist and other anthropological theories. While these theories have shed some light on the nature of African oral song, this has been at the expense of exploring the actual song texts in their own right. This paper samples and explores some selected songs from the iSiXhosa cultural traditions by means of textual analysis. The paper intends to show that song genres cross-pollinate each other and that the recurrent themes in the songs contextualize and underpin the social and philosophical lives of the Xhosa people. Since the Xhosa people are differentiated in terms of age, class and gender, it follows that the themes of the songs reflect and mediate this reality. Songs can suggest new themes or can be interpreted in new ways which, when accepted in the Xhosa community, can then become dominant and recurrent ways of interpreting reality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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17. Morality and sexual rights: constructions of masculinity, femininity and sexuality among a group of South African soldiers.
- Author
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Mankayi, Nyameka
- Subjects
MILITARY personnel ,HETEROSEXUALITY ,MALE domination (Social structure) ,SEX discrimination against women ,ABUSE of women ,HIV infection transmission ,SEXUAL ethics for women ,WOMEN'S rights ,WOMEN ,SOCIAL conditions of women ,ETHICS - Abstract
This paper describes how South African soldiers draw on notions of gender, sexuality and morality in their constructions of identity and heterosexual sexuality. Popular discourses around HIV and AIDS in South Africa and elsewhere have highlighted the centrality of notions of morality, many of them problematic, in the response to the epidemic. In Southern Africa, the centrality of heterosexuality to HIV transmission has triggered a focus on morality in sexuality, including calls for abstinence or, in married relationships, monogamy. This paper discusses the findings of a research study that explored male soldiers' constructions of masculinity, sexuality and risky sexual practices. Discourses that emerged reflected dominant attitudes regarding men and women's sexual rights and, in particular, the moralisation of women's sexuality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Soft Power and the Currency of Sports: (Re)imagining South Africa's Rising Hegemony in Africa.
- Author
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Ogunnubi, Olusola
- Subjects
SPORTS participation ,INTERNATIONAL competition ,HEGEMONY ,SPORTS ,DESPAIR ,BALANCE of power ,SCHOLARLY periodicals - Abstract
Commenting on the utility of sports as a development facilitating instrument, Nelson Mandela, in 2000, remarked that it "has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. It has the power to unite people in a way that little else can. Sport can awaken hope where there was previously only despair". Madiba's iconic statement captures the changing reality of the international system wherein states appreciate the soft power potential of sports as a subtle alternative for gaining political advantage in the international arena. This also lends credence to the argument that politics permeates all elements of social existence, including sports. In view of the preceding, this paper interrogates the rising attractiveness of South Africa in Africa and perhaps globally through the lens of its sporting engagements. From the last decade of the 20th century, South Africa's status in the sporting world has attracted much international and scholarly attention. The article examines how South Africa negotiates the overlapping arena of politics, sports and foreign policy to normatively secure a regional hegemonic posture through a blend of strategies. These include successful bidding and hosting of sporting mega-events; involvement in the development of sporting codes and local sports content across Africa and a positive cumulative ranking in international competitions vis-à-vis other contenders for regional powerhood. The analysis takes the position that South Africa's strategy of sports diplomacy masks its aspiration for regional hegemony and this pattern is uniquely relevant for shaping empirical understanding of power politics in Africa as well as appreciating the ideational potency of soft power as a constitutive element of what makes a regional hegemon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Environmental problem-solving in South Africa: harnessing creative imaginaries to address ‘wicked’ challenges and opportunities.
- Author
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Vogel, C., Scott, D., Culwick, C. E., and Sutherland, C.
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,CLIMATE change ,GLOBAL environmental change ,INTERDISCIPLINARY research - Abstract
The world is confronting a range of ‘wicked problems’ that defy simple, linear solutions. Increasingly, the range of challenges including poverty, climate change and environmental degradation require solutions that cannot be drawn from a single knowledge base. Although excellent environmental legislation exists in South Africa (including that relating to climate change), it alone is not sufficient to solve the challenges the country faces. Rather, science that builds knowledge through engagement with a variety of actors, their views, expertise and perspectives, including mutual and transgressive learning, is required. This paper presents three South African case studies that reflect on the value of adopting transdisciplinary (TD) and co-production of knowledge (CPK) approaches to environmental problem-solving. Although not without their challenges, TD and CPK are inclusive approaches which usually enable a wider framing of environmental challenges and their ownership by various publics, and pave the way for effective implementation of solutions and actions. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Contradictions of capitalism in the South African Kalahari: Indigenous Bushmen, their brand and baasskap in tourism.
- Author
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Koot, Stasja Patoelja
- Subjects
INDIGENOUS tourism ,SAN (African people) ,CAPITALISM ,TOURISM ,TOURISM economics ,AUTHENTICITY (Philosophy) ,ECONOMIC history - Abstract
The question of who controls Indigenous tourism is of wide and growing relevance in post-colonial societies, especially in so-called transition economies, that are moving from state-led economies to mostly market-based economies. This paper explores such global–local dynamics for an Indigenous group in South Africa in relation to authenticity, development and power relations. Based on ethnographic fieldwork among the Indigenous South Kalahari Bushmen (≠Khomani) and their interactions with the tourism sector, especially up-market accommodation projects, it questions assumptions that economic and educational benefits will “trickle down” to the poor. It exposes two key contradictions in the capitalist tourist system. The first is that authenticity is opposed to becoming inauthentic; the Bushmen stay “authentic” for tourists who impose modernity as consumers, making the Bushmen merely an “Indigenous brand” that attracts tourists, creating revenue that trickles down into the area but hardly to those whoarethe brand. The second contradiction is that of poverty alleviation through a system that marginalises the Indigenous, and critically probes the concept of tourism “developing” (educating) Indigenous people. This assumed education is minimal: Bushmen and white managers are entangled in colonial paternalism (baasskap), with managers often lacking broader understanding of development, focusing mainly on economic growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Evaluating the quality of Environmental Impact Assessment Reports (EIARs) for tourism developments in protected areas: The Kruger to Canyons Biosphere case study.
- Author
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Malepe, Keletso V., González, Ainhoa, and Retief, Francois P.
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *ENVIRONMENTAL quality , *PROTECTED areas , *SUSTAINABILITY , *BIOSPHERE reserves , *SUSTAINABLE tourism - Abstract
There has been little empirical investigation of Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) performance towards safeguarding conservation and promoting responsible tourism within protected areas. This paper examines the quality of EIA Reports (EIARs) prepared for tourism developments in the world-renowned Kruger to Canyons (K2C) Biosphere Reserve, one of the largest in Africa. An adapted version of the internationally recognised Lee and Colley report review package was used. The review results indicate that the EIARs are, overall, of satisfactory quality and that the reports provide adequate information to support the incorporation of sustainable and responsible tourism principles in decision-making. However, inadequacies are observed in certain review areas, namely public participation, provision for mitigation and monitoring, and content of non-technical summaries. Notably, the analytical review areas (e.g. impact assessment) perform better than the descriptive ones (e.g. presentation of assessment results), which contrasts with review findings reported in the international literature. This research provides important insights and contributes to advancing review frameworks and to ongoing debates around the potential of EIA to foster environmental protection and sustainability within protected areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. 'I'm in love with an older man': reasons for intergenerational sexual relationships among young women in South Africa.
- Author
-
De Wet, Nicole, Alex-Ojei, Christiana, and Akinyemi, Joshua
- Subjects
INTERGENERATIONAL relations ,YOUNG women ,WIDOWHOOD ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,OLDER men ,LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
Copyright of Culture, Health & Sexuality is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Navigating Black Identity: Self-Identification Strategies of Refugees in Post-Apartheid South Africa.
- Author
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Tewolde, Amanuel Isak
- Subjects
RACIAL identity of Black people ,POLITICAL refugees ,RACE discrimination ,DATA analysis - Abstract
Scholars studying race in post-apartheid South Africa have largely focused on South African nationals. Little is known about the ways in which non-South African migrants and refugees navigate the South African racial classification system. In the context of continued immigration to South Africa, it is important to examine how refugees negotiate South African racial categories. This paper addresses this gap by interviewing Eritrean refugees and asylum seekers, who originate from an ethnicity-based classification system, to examine how they racially self-identify in everyday life as a result of their exposure to a race-conscious host society. Convenience and snowball sampling were used to select participants. The research sites were Johannesburg, Durban and Cape Town. A qualitative interpretative phenomenological analysis approach was employed to analyse data. The results presented here (patterns of Black self-identification) form only part of a larger project involving 46 Eritrean asylum seekers. Only 16 or one-third of the participants appropriated South African Black identity for a variety of reasons. Five themes were identified within Black self-identification: (1) "my phenotype makes me Black"; (2) "I feel Black when around Black South African friends"; (3) "living in Black neighbourhoods makes me feel black"; (4) "I am Black as I identify with the black experience"; and (5) "I check Black on forms to benefit from affirmative action". Participants appropriated Black identity for various reasons depending on different circumstantial factors. For some participants, their physical appearance did not inform their Black self-identification, but other social factors. Through their various tactics and strategies of Black self-identification, participants redefined and re-casted what it means to be Black in post-apartheid South Africa. Their reasons for Black self-identification violate traditional understandings of Blackness in South Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Re-sourcing of resources: an investigation into student teachers' manipulation of resources in disadvantaged teaching contexts.
- Author
-
Makina, Blandina
- Subjects
TEACHER effectiveness ,TEACHING aids ,EDUCATION ,FACILITATED learning ,CURRICULUM planning - Abstract
The focus of this paper is the availability and use of resources in disadvantaged schools in South Africa 20 years after the country attained democracy. It examines the extent to which teachers working in these deprived environments use available resources to perform their key pedagogical functions. The unit of analysis is a group of teachers registered for an in-service subject didactics English module at the University of South Africa (Unisa). A qualitative paradigm was adopted for the study and two instruments were used to gather data: semi-structured interviews and a lesson observation protocol. The results show that while much has been done since independence to improve the quality of education in disadvantaged contexts, teachers are still too burdened by constraints presented by their teaching environments; they are therefore unable to take control of available resources. Improving the quality of teaching and learning would entail a re-imagining of the entire education system with a view of empowering the teacher. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Decolonisation is now: photography and student-social movements in South Africa.
- Author
-
Thomas, Kylie
- Subjects
DECOLONIZATION ,PHOTOGRAPHY ,EDUCATION ,STUDENT strikes ,BLACK students - Abstract
The 2015–2016 student protest movements to decolonise universities and to bring about free education in South Africa have been accompanied by striking images that capture the Zeitgeist of the post-apartheid state. This paper focuses on photographs taken by students who also took part in the protests and argues that a new iconography has emerged that references the past but that also breaks away from the social documentary forms of representation that characterised the struggle against apartheid. I explore how the resurgence of black consciousness is made manifest in visual images and argue for reading photographs by student-protestor-photographers as tangible signs of the emerging ‘woke’ subjectivities of young black people in South Africa today. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The topography of masculine normativities in South Africa.
- Author
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Levon, Erez, Milani, Tommaso M., and Kitis, E. Dimitris
- Subjects
MASCULINITY ,NEWSPAPER publishing ,MASCULINITY in literature ,HEGEMONY - Abstract
In this paper, we examine representations of masculinity in the English-language South African print media. Using both quantitative and qualitative techniques to interrogate a large corpus (18 million words) of English-language newspaper articles on masculinity that appeared in South Africa between 2008 and 2014, we investigate the ways in which different South African masculine types are positioned with respect to one another in the media and examine how these positionings draw on broader tropes of gender, race and social class that circulate in South African society. Ultimately, our goal is to provide a more nuanced picture of gender/sexual hegemony in South Africa that goes beyond a simple opposition between dominant versus subordinate forms of masculinity to explore the range of competing normativities in the region. In doing so, we also aim to contribute to debates about the role of norms and normativities in the theorizing of masculinity more broadly. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Queer Desire and the Men of the Nation: Reading Race, Masculinity, and South African National Identity in John Greyson’s Proteus.
- Author
-
Arseneault, Jesse
- Subjects
QUEER theory ,MASCULINITY ,MOTION pictures ,SOUTH African history ,EIGHTEENTH century - Abstract
This article examines John Greyson’s film,Proteus, for the way it figures queer masculinity and race in South Africa’s national historical narrative. The film offers an esthetic rendering of an eighteenth century interracial sodomy trial set on Robben Island. Drawing on contemporary queer theory and recent South African narratives of masculinity that privilege heternormativity and nationalism, this paper argues that the film carves out a space for queer identity within national history where it had previously been denied. The paper traces the way that the film interjects queer narratives into South Africa’s national identity, disrupts the heteronormalization of various sites of national iconography on South Africa’s historical terrain (such as Robben Island), and offers a queer masculinity that resists racial segregation. Moreover, this paper traces the ways that the film has implications for contemporary queer communities within South Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. ‘A Member of the Race’: Dr Modiri Molema's Intellectual Engagement with the Popular History of South Africa, 1912–1921.
- Author
-
Starfield, Jane
- Subjects
INTELLECTUALS ,RACISM in literature ,IDENTITY (Psychology) in literature ,NATIONALISTS ,NATIONALISM - Abstract
This paper offers a prelude to the reconsideration of the writing life and contribution of an African intellectual and nationalist who, studiously and courageously, subjected the concepts of race, culture and nationalism to critical evaluation. Molema's engagement with popular politics began after his return from years of studying medicine at Glasgow University. However, from 1912 to 1921, he engaged with the history of South Africa intellectually, only later producing essays and speeches for more popular audiences. His study of black South Africans, The Bantu Past and Present (1920) challenged racist interpretations of the past, while also taking subtle aim at racism in Scotland during and after World War I. The text is multi-layered, moving from first- to third-person narration, which suggests that the author's own identity was subtly entangled with this project. In the Preface, the young writer defines his writing identity, revealing that the book's purpose is historical, ethnographical and, implicitly, nationalist. This paper examines the Preface's crucial role in defining the author's writing identity as nationalist and intellectual. Molema used his standpoint knowledge as ‘a member of the race’ whose story he ‘unfold[ed] to the world’ to begin the task of carefully reclaiming black history from the margins of South African cultural life. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Ancestors of Broom's pigs.
- Author
-
Pickford, Martin
- Subjects
SEDIMENTS ,WARTHOG ,SUIDAE ,BIOLOGICAL evolution - Abstract
Between 1925 and 1950, Robert Broom described one new genus and four new species of extinct suids from Plio-Pleistocene sediments in South Africa – three of them of giant proportions and one the same size as the extant Wart Hog (Phacochoerus). Since the end of the Second World War, dozens of papers have been published on Plio-Pleistocene African suids, yet only one of the genera has had a detailed scenario of its origins published: Broom's genus Notochoerus, which is widely admitted to belong to the Tetraconodontinae and to be a descendant of Nyanzachoerus. The aim of this paper is to examine the well documented Late Miocene and Pliocene suid fossil record of Eurasia in order to determine whether any of the taxa could be closely related to the other African taxa described by Broom. A new species of suid from Egypt is described, which probably represents the earliest African record of the lineage that eventually gave rise to the kolpochoeres. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Truncated Multilingualism or Language Shift? An Examination of Language Use in Intimate Domains in a New Non-racial Working Class Township in South Africa.
- Author
-
Dyers, Charlyn
- Subjects
MULTILINGUALISM ,SOUTH African languages ,ENGLISH language ,NATIVE language ,COMMUNICATION & culture ,MULTICULTURALISM ,PLURAL societies - Abstract
The dominance of English in particular domains of language use in South Africa, such as higher education and the economy, has led to the fear that other languages may be threatened by an increasing shift to English in all domains, especially among the young. However, this paper reveals the strong vitality of the mother tongues in the intimate domains and increasing multilingualism becoming the norm in new shared spaces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. 'Hit your man where you can': Taxation strategies in the face of resistance at the British Cape Colony, c.1820 to 1910.
- Author
-
Gwaindepi, Abel and Siebrits, Krige
- Subjects
BRITISH colonies ,ASSASSINS ,TAXATION ,MINERAL industries ,SYSTEMS development - Abstract
The topic of this article is the development of the tax system of the Cape Colony from 1820 to 1910. This period was crucial for the introduction and diffusion of modern taxes, and the Cape constitutes an important case as the prime settler-colony in Africa. The article uses a new tax dataset and evidence from official documents to trace and explain the Colony's growing revenue problems during this period. It shows that few changes were made to the tax system from the annexation of diamond fields in 1877 until the end of the South African War in 1902 and that the public coffers mainly benefitted indirectly from the Colony's increased prosperity via railway earnings. This, it is argued, largely reflected the success of efforts by the mining industry to block the introduction of new taxes. The article emphasizes the unusual form of this resistance: instead of undertaking conventional lobbying activities, industry representatives obtained positions of policymaking authority in the Cape Colony's then still immature system of democratic institutions. Hence, it draws on the experience of the Cape to show that immature democratic institutions can hamper fiscal capacity-building. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Time, Weather and Empires: The Campos Rodrigues Observatory in Lourenço Marques, Mozambique (1905–1930).
- Author
-
Raposo, Pedro M. P.
- Subjects
ASTRONOMICAL observatories ,HISTORY of Mozambique, 1891-1975 ,PORTUGUESE colonies ,BRITISH colonies ,SCIENCE ,HISTORY ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,COLONIAL Africa - Abstract
In 1905 the Campos Rodrigues Observatory (CRO) was founded in Lourenço Marques (nowadays Maputo), the capital of Mozambique, by then part of the Portuguese overseas empire. In this paper the inception and early history of the CRO are analysed in the broader context of the interwoven history of the Portuguese and British empires in Africa, and specifically with respect to the scientific relations between Mozambique and South Africa. The equipment, personnel, practices and networks involved in the inception and early development of the CRO are brought into focus in order to illustrate the problems and strategies that shaped the establishment and functioning of this observatory, which was conceived essentially as a symbol of imperial stamina and colonial prowess. It is suggested that by providing a focal point for the development of scientific relations between Mozambique and South Africa, the CRO served both Portuguese ambitions for recognition as an imperial power and the emergence of South African nationalism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Navigating the ethical maze in disability research: ethical contestations in an African context.
- Author
-
Nuwagaba, Ephraim Lemmy and Rule, Peter
- Subjects
HUMAN rights ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) ,LEARNING strategies ,MEDICAL ethics ,PEOPLE with disabilities ,PRIVACY ,RESEARCH ethics ,RESEARCH personnel ,HUMAN research subjects - Abstract
Despite changes in how disability is viewed, ethical requirements for disability research have hardly changed. Some ethical clearance procedures, processes and practices still consider persons with disabilities as not able, creating unease among researchers and research participants with disabilities themselves. This paper considers five ethical contestations arising from research in the area of disability in an African context: positionality, vulnerability, signed consent, anonymity, and research committee composition. We argue that ethical requirements in practice are still largely based on a medical model of disability and propose that culturally sensitive social and human rights models should influence disability research ethics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. A critical appraisal of Uzani Environmental Advocacy CC v BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd 2019 (5) SA 275 (GP).
- Author
-
Rantlo, John and Viljoen, Germarié
- Subjects
- *
LEGAL judgments , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection , *ENVIRONMENTAL management , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *SERVICE stations - Abstract
The recent court judgment of Uzani Environmental Advocacy CC v BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd 2019 (5) SA 275 (GP) found BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd (BP) guilty of environmental offences. The Court held that BP commenced with listed activities related to upgrades and construction work of filling stations without the necessary environmental authorisations (EAs) required by the National Environmental Management Act 107 of 1998 (NEMA) and the Environmental Conservation Act 73 of 1989 (ECA). Section 24 G of NEMA, however, allows for the rectification of the unlawful commencement or continuation of a listed activity conducted in the absence of the required EAs. Section 24 G therefore permits the ex post facto legalising or retrospective authorisation of the unlawful acts. In the case at hand, BP was found guilty, despite having applied for an ex post facto authorisation. This paper engages with the arguments put forward by the court, reflects on insights brought about by the foreign law, and provides possible recommendations for the retrospective environmental authorisation regime in South Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Benefit corporations for Africa? A South African perspective on alternative corporate forms.
- Author
-
Klaaren, Jonathan
- Subjects
ECONOMIC expansion ,SOCIAL enterprises ,CORPORATIONS ,SOCIAL responsibility of business - Abstract
The question of the potential for alternative corporate forms in Africa is a significant one. Alongside the dominant current which argues that the traditional corporation is the way forward for economic growth in South Africa, several other streams of thought have contested and been critical of the traditional corporate model. Within the range of structures alternative to the traditional corporation, this article focuses on the particular legal form of benefit corporations. The benefit corporation has made its entry into what one might term the global statute book through the jurisdictions of over twenty American states. While the South African Companies legislation was overhauled and replaced in 2008 with a completely revamped statute, no specific provision was made for a benefit corporation. Since 2008, two practices alternative to further revising the statute book have developed in South Africa: third-party certification and hybrid structuring. While the legal potential to craft a benefit corporation in South Africa exists, there is little evidence of this legal potential and form being developed to date, despite a growing appreciation and interest in the social enterprise sector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Secondary vegetation provides a reservoir of non-timber forest products and agroforestry service options for forestry plantation systems, Maputaland, South Africa.
- Author
-
Starke, AP, Geldenhuys, CJ, O'Connor, TG, and Everson, CS
- Subjects
TREE farms ,PLANTATIONS ,NON-timber forest products ,AGROFORESTRY ,WOOD products ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,NATIVE plants - Abstract
Tree species providing non-timber forest products (NTFPs) have the potential to enhance the socio-economic value of forestry plantation systems and mitigate biodiversity loss associated with production landscapes in Southern Africa. This can be accomplished by integrating NTFP agroforestry systems with forestry plantation systems but raises questions around which species and products are suited to the different environments that exist within large plantation systems or plantation landscapes. These questions can be answered by assessing the NTFP and agroforestry system (AFS) value of native species that form part of secondary vegetation within forestry plantations by shedding light on the disturbance regimes and environmental conditions that NTFP species prefer. This study assessed the NTFP value of secondary vegetation growing within abandoned clear-felled and abandoned unharvested forestry compartments. It addressed differences between the NTFP value of secondary vegetation and natural forest while providing options for how native species could be integrated into a forestry plantation system using agroforestry. We found that secondary vegetation growing in abandoned compartments provided roughly two-thirds of the NTFP uses provided by natural forest. The state of the compartment at the time of abandonment influenced which NTFPs were available. Secondary woodland developing in clear-felled compartments contained NTFPs which were associated with fire-adapted woodland species (e.g. fruit and oils from Marula trees). Naturalising forest in unfelled plantation compartments contained a composition of NTFPs associated with the provision of wood products. Our results show that native vegetation growing as secondary vegetation in forestry plantation systems has the potential to guide the development of native species agro-forestry systems and, in general, can contribute to a more formalised approach for integrating NTFP supply in forestry plantation systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. From liberation movement to party machine? The ANC in South Africa.
- Author
-
Southall, Roger
- Subjects
SOUTH African politics & government, 1994- ,DEMOCRACY ,POLITICAL parties ,NATIONAL liberation movements ,POLITICAL patronage ,POLITICAL corruption - Abstract
This article contributes to a growing literature on the character of leadership, democracy and governance espoused by post-liberation governments, focusing on the African National Congress (ANC) as a political party. The article provides a brief overview of the two most common approaches to analysing the ANC's transition from a national liberation movement to a political party in an electoral democracy, the dominant party approach and what is termed the Fanonesque perspective. Neither is found to be wholly satisfactory, for largely the same reason – their tendency to present what is effectively a caricature of the ANC, by selectively highlighting features of its practices that conform to a pre-determined pathology, rather than acknowledging the ANC's complexity, variability and essentially contested nature. In developing an alternative approach, the paper draws from an earlier body of literature on single-party–dominant states in post-independent Africa that was empirically driven and comparative in nature. Such an approach can help us develop a more realistic, less sensationalist interpretation of ANC rule in South Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Things fall apart: South Africa and the collapse of the Portuguese Empire, 1973–74.
- Author
-
Miller, Jamie
- Subjects
TWENTIETH century ,DIPLOMATIC history ,PORTUGUESE colonies ,DECOLONIZATION ,PORTUGUESE politics & government, 1933-1974 ,COUPS d'etat ,SOUTH African history, 1961-1994 ,SOUTH African politics & government, 1961-1978 ,INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
The April 1974 coup in Lisbon and the ensuing rapid decolonisation of Portugal's colonies marked the birth of the Southern African theatre of the Cold War. It also heralded the steady decline of Pretoria's apartheid regime. This paper seeks to illuminate why South Africa was so profoundly affected by the collapse of Lisbon's authority and the upheaval of the regional status quo that occurred as a result. It argues that in contrast to its creative and formative foreign policy endeavours in Africa, by 1974 South Africa's national security hinged fundamentally on a profound reliance on Lisbon to combat radical black nationalism and on Washington to provide diplomatic cover for their joint efforts. The primary impact of the coup, therefore, was to undermine South Africa's entire security and thereby produce the sense of acute isolation that drove its shift towards the more radical security policies of the late 1970s and 1980s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Modifying dam operating rules to deliver environmental flows: experiences from southern Africa.
- Author
-
Brown, Cate and King, Jackie
- Subjects
WATER resources development ,DAMS ,DECISION making ,KATSE Dam (Lesotho) ,MANAGEMENT - Abstract
Provision for environmental flows (EFs) in water use and water-resource developments has been legislated in several southern and eastern African countries. While much of the focus has been on the assessment of EFs for new water-resource developments, some attention has been paid to the possibilities of modifying the operation of existing infrastructure to deliver EFs. This paper summarizes research done to support the re-operation of the Katse Dam in Lesotho, the Clanwilliam and Kogelberg Dams in South Africa, the Cahora Bassa Dam in Mozambique and the Nyumba ya Munga Dam in Tanzania in ways that would reduce their downstream impacts. For each, the original and suggested new operating rules are presented, and the reasons for the suggested changes are summarized. The negotiation and decision-making processes relevant to each dam are also discussed, and some of the challenges faced at two of the dams (Katse and Kogelberg), where revised operating rules have been implemented, are reviewed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Rural Reggae: The Politics of Performance in the Former ‘Homeland’ of Venda.
- Author
-
McNeill, FraserG.
- Subjects
MUSIC & politics ,VENDA (African people) ,REGGAE music ,CONCERTS ,CENSORSHIP ,MUSIC ,RADIO broadcasting ,TWENTIETH century ,GOVERNMENT policy ,HISTORY ,SOCIAL history ,MUSIC & society - Abstract
With the Broadcasting Amendment Act of 1960, the South African government began to regulate forms of entertainment intended for public and private consumption. Radio broadcasts were controlled and musical recordings were regulated under this and subsequent legislation, with over 100 albums being banned outright and many more individual songs classified as ‘undesirable’. This legislation was applicable in the ‘homelands’, and musical productions – especially for SABC Radio Bantu – were censored. However, enforcing censorship laws in terms of live performances in the ‘homelands’ proved more problematic. Whilst the evidence from Venda lends some support to the established, romantic notion that musicians – and their music – were deeply embedded in the struggle against apartheid, there is equal evidence to suggest that many musicians at the time had little interest in revolutionary activity. Whilst self-censorship was prevalent on many levels, the motivation for this was not clear-cut. Christian convictions that those in power had been put there by God, or the liberating conviction that musicians were ‘simply entertainers’ and not politicians, prompted musicians to abide by censorship laws. Even for those who were politically aware, challenging the system was generally perceived to be not worth the risk. In the former ‘homeland’ of Venda, important exceptions to this stem from one family – the Mukwevho of Tshitomboni – whose most famous son, Colbert, made himself a target of the state by adopting reggae as his genre of choice. By charting Colbert's transition as a musician from the late 1970s to the present day, this paper demonstrates that musicians in the former ‘homeland’ of Venda had more freedom to record and perform ‘undesirable’ songs than has previously been accepted. However it does not follow that they all did so. The story of the Mukwevho family shows how different artists reacted in diverse ways to the political situation in which they found themselves. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Large Shell Middens and Hunter-Gatherer Resource Intensification Along the West Coast of South Africa: The Elands Bay Case Study.
- Author
-
Jerardino, Antonieta
- Subjects
MUSSELS ,SHELLFISH ,FORAGING behavior ,ETHNOLOGY ,ARCHAEOLOGICAL research ,HUMAN skeleton - Abstract
“Megamiddens” appear along the West Coast of South Africa c. 3000–2000 BP. Kalahari San ethnography was used initially to explain them as processing localities given the massive volumes of marine shell and low densities of other remains. However, recent research in Lamberts Bay using a resource intensification model seems to explain more of the observed archaeological variability. In this paper, the evidence of Elands Bay megamiddens is studied in this same light and similar conclusions are arrived to. Rising population levels between 3500 and 2500 BP are followed by a reformulation of the foraging ecology of both marine and terrestrial prey, with isotopic values from human skeletons and archaeological data showing high marine food consumption during the megamidden period when compared to other stages. Signs of black mussel overexploitation are apparent by 3000 BP, although shellfish harvesting is most intense c. 2600–2200 BP. Further sampling of Elands Bay megamiddens is needed to better understand shellfish foraging between 3000 and 2500 BP. Foragers hunted less large mobile game by 2600 BP and instead small territorial bovids were procured more heavily at this time with tortoise collection being intensified between 3000 and 2600 BP. Cave usage may have been very different to that before and after the megamidden millennium given the lack of visits to these sites in Elands Bay at this time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. South Africa and Peacekeeping in Africa.
- Author
-
van Nieuwkerk, Anthoni
- Subjects
AFRICAN peacekeeping forces ,POST-apartheid era ,PEACE ,NATIONAL security - Abstract
This paper traces the development of the South African government's postapartheid approach to African peace and stability, including the evolution of its policy on peacekeeping. It then explores the challenges and opportunities facing South Africa as a member of the United Nations Security Council and African Union Peace and Security Council. It offers an analysis of the sustainability of South Africa's current and future peacemaking, peacekeeping, and peace building efforts on the continent and concludes that it needs to further develop, implement, and manage an integrated and long-term foreign and security policy to the benefit of the country and the continent. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Unlocking the Cape Code: Establishing British Football in South Africa.
- Author
-
Winch, Jonty
- Subjects
SOCCER ,SPORTS & society ,ATHLETIC leagues ,SOCCER teams ,BRITISH colonies ,19TH century British colonial administration ,ADMINISTRATION of British colonies ,COLONIAL Africa - Abstract
This paper examines the emergence of modern forms of football in southern Africa during the late nineteenth century. It focuses on Cape Town - 'the birthplace of South African sport as we know it today' 1 - and draws on comparative material from elsewhere in the region and overseas. It also locates events within wider social and political developments at a time when Britain sought to establish its supremacy through a federation of the South African colonies and republics. Central to the investigation is the need to discover more about the existence of a Cape football code and to ascertain the means by which William Milton championed rugby in the course of promoting a broader imperial sporting culture. In exploring the changes which occur, the article will pay attention to the stance of the press and take into account soccer's struggle for recognition; the establishment of parallel black football organisations, and the escalation in Afrikaner support for rugby. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The limitations of 'inter-racial contact': stories from young South Africa.
- Author
-
Vincent, Louise
- Subjects
SEGREGATION ,WHITE people ,SOUTH Africans ,AFRICANS ,ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
This paper argues that, while the demise of apartheid has led to many situations in which South Africans now come into closer contact with one another, this increased 'contact' does not amount to greater racial integration. Contact occurs within a context of unequal power relations in which 'whiteness' continues to be privileged over 'blackness'. The result is that white people tend to benefit more from contact with the racial 'other' than black people, who often experience this contact as reinforcing their expectations of continued white dominance and privilege. While contact may undermine blatantly racist practices and overt racial conflict, racialized patterns of reasoning continue to exist, often unnoticed and unchallenged. These include the assumption that race is an incontrovertible fact of experience, the privileging of whiteness, the assumption that there exist different (biological) races which evince different forms of social behaviour and that these are essential properties of people rather than being historically or socially contingent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Pesticide use among emerging farmers in South Africa: contributing factors and stakeholder perspectives.
- Author
-
Rother, Hanna-Andrea, Hall, Ruth, and London, Leslie
- Subjects
AGRICULTURE ,AGRICULTURAL economics ,PESTICIDES ,PESTICIDES industry ,SOCIAL conditions of farmers ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
The commercial agricultural sector in South Africa has historically been dominated by large-scale operations run by white owners and managers. In redressing this imbalance, black farmers classified as 'emerging' are being encouraged to engage in high-input agricultural production in order to obtain 'commercial' status. Since existing practices in commercial agriculture rely heavily on pesticides, emerging farmers aspiring to become commercial are pressured to adopt and/or increase the use of pesticides. However, problems of access to land, finances, resources, skills and markets overshadow the health and safety of these farmers and their labour force that may be affected by exposure to pesticides. This paper presents the results of a policy study based on primary interview data with key stakeholders and secondary documentary review data, to illustrate how pesticides are used in an occupational health and safety vacuum because the focus of key institutions is rather on economic productivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Bokkies/moffies: cinematic images of black sexual identity in Zonk! (1950).
- Author
-
Maingard, Jacqueline
- Subjects
MOTION pictures ,GENDER identity ,IDENTITY (Psychology) ,HETEROSEXUAL women - Abstract
In the late 1940s and 1950s, there was a cluster of films made in South Africa that focused on the black experience. The first of these were Jim Comes to Joburg released in 1949 and Zonk! in 1950, both representing black identity in ways that mark a shift away from earlier fomulations of black people as savages or servile. Zonk! and the later film Song of Africa (1951) both made by African Film Productions are presented as musical revues within a theatrical context, featuring a range of black songs and performance styles. Zonk! is extraordinary in that a small set of songs opens up questions of sexual identity. These songs are enacted by two men as a central couple, with an all-male backing troupe that sometimes mirrors or re-enacts aspects of the central couple's performance. One of the songs, for example, features a routine chorus: Oh Jan tog, squeeze my… ('Oh Jan please, squeeze me…') where all the singers dance together as couples, 'squeezing' their partners. Later in the film, a detailed narrative display and song-and-dance routine is developed around one of the same all-male troupe cross-dressed as the female manager in a compound 'restaurant', and playing the stereotypical heterosexual role of 'woman' in relation to the men's sexual advances. Zonk! is an essentially conservative film, both in its production base and the values it expounds overall, yet it embraces what might be seen as a radical crossing of boundaries that questions established perceptions of identity and particularly of black sexual identity in the early 1950s. In this sense it proposes identities, albeit ambiguously, beyond perceptions of national identities at that time. This is the terrain that this paper seeks to explore. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The utilization of special forces in peace missions: perspectives from South Africa.
- Author
-
Bester, Louis
- Subjects
PEACE ,COLD War, 1945-1991 - Abstract
The fascination with special forces could be ascribed to the prominence of their use in contemporary conflicts across the globe. There is, however, a paradox of employing such a highly lethal force in order to pursuit peace. With peacekeeping evolving parallel with the strategic environment, especially in Africa, the trend towards more robust interventions has become prevalent since the end of the Cold War. As such, the requirement for accurate and timely intelligence in peace missions has become crucial. Admittedly, special forces would not necessarily be the soldiers expected to wear blue berets and participate in peace missions. It may come as a surprise to the uninformed, though, to learn that special forces have indeed participated, and are still involved, in peace missions across the globe. Drawing from a case study where special forces have been involved in peace missions under the umbrella of the United Nations in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, this article investigates the utilization of special forces and the role they could play in peace missions in Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Genomic and environmental risk factors for cardiometabolic diseases in Africa: methods used for Phase 1 of the AWI-Gen population cross-sectional study.
- Author
-
Ali, Stuart A., Soo, Cassandra, Agongo, Godfred, Alberts, Marianne, Amenga-Etego, Lucas, Boua, Romuald P., Choudhury, Ananyo, Crowther, Nigel J., Depuur, Cornelius, Gómez-Olivé, F. Xavier, Guiraud, Issa, Haregu, Tilahun N., Hazelhurst, Scott, Kahn, Kathleen, Khayeka-Wandabwa, Christopher, Kyobutungi, Catherine, Lombard, Zané, Mashinya, Felistas, Micklesfield, Lisa, and Mohamed, Shukri F.
- Subjects
METABOLIC disorders ,ANTHROPOMETRY ,BIOMARKERS ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases risk factors ,ALCOHOL drinking ,PHENOTYPES ,GENOMICS ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,CROSS-sectional method ,PHYSICAL activity ,GENETICS ,DISEASE risk factors - Abstract
There is an alarming tide of cardiovascular and metabolic disease (CMD) sweeping across Africa. This may be a result of an increasingly urbanized lifestyle characterized by the growing consumption of processed and calorie-dense food, combined with physical inactivity and more sedentary behaviour. While the link between lifestyle and public health has been extensively studied in Caucasian and African American populations, few studies have been conducted in Africa. This paper describes the detailed methods for Phase 1 of the AWI-Gen study that were used to capture phenotype data and assess the associated risk factors and end points for CMD in persons over the age of 40 years in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). We developed a population-based cross-sectional study of disease burden and phenotype in Africans, across six centres in SSA. These centres are in West Africa (Nanoro, Burkina Faso, and Navrongo, Ghana), in East Africa (Nairobi, Kenya) and in South Africa (Agincourt, Dikgale and Soweto). A total of 10,702 individuals between the ages of 40 and 60 years were recruited into the study across the six centres, plus an additional 1021 participants over the age of 60 years from the Agincourt centre. We collected socio-demographic, anthropometric, medical history, diet, physical activity, fat distribution and alcohol/tobacco consumption data from participants. Blood samples were collected for disease-related biomarker assays, and genomic DNA extraction for genome-wide association studies. Urine samples were collected to assess kidney function. The study provides base-line data for the development of a series of cohorts with a second wave of data collection in Phase 2 of the study. These data will provide valuable insights into the genetic and environmental influences on CMD on the African continent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. South Africa: The election and the transition process--five contradictions in search of a resolution.
- Author
-
Johnston, Alexander
- Subjects
POLITICAL culture ,SOUTH African politics & government ,PRESIDENTS ,LIBERTY ,EQUALITY - Abstract
This article offers an interpretation of the political culture which has emerged in South Africa since President F. W. de Klerk's reforms of February 1990. A useful way of approaching political cultures is to see them as syntheses of contradictory elements or impulses. For instance the sometimes contrary demands of liberty and equality, or of ethnicity and common citizenship might struggle for expression. Elements of continuity and change will mark a political culture in either evolutionary or revolutionary transformation. To observe that the political culture which has been evolving since February 1990 is marked by deep contradictions does not make South Africa unique, but there are aspects of these contradictions which make it singular among others with similar experiences. It is the argument of this paper that South Africa's prospects of a settled future can be seen in terms of five contradictions in search of a synthesis and that the April 1994 election will provide an important pointers as to whether and how this synthesis is likely to be achieved.
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A second-order witness: observing infant observers in South Africa.
- Author
-
Ross, Fiona C.
- Subjects
INFANTS ,INFANT health ,FAMILIES ,MENTAL health ,WITNESSES - Abstract
Infant mental health is a new field in southern Africa. Some of its premises do not mesh neatly with local social forms and cultural precepts. Infant observation is a key element in the training of students in the only M. Phil programme on infant mental health in Africa. During training, students raised concerns about the model. Seminar discussions generated rich data about their efforts to secure an observational stance true to both the observational model and local relational practices. An anthropologist attended the seminars at which students reported on their weekly infant observations. Discussions were recorded and key themes identified. The anthropologist's 'second-order witnessing' enabled careful reflection on the experience of learning to be an observer and observed. The article considers the process of finding an observational stance both epistemologically and practically in the socio-centric worlds of southern Africa, and reflects on the experiences of being observed from the points of view of the caregivers and infants. It demonstrates that despite the model's presumption of distance, observers become significant persons in the life of the family. Through close attention to how received models settle in practice, we can derive important questions about epistemological conflicts and productive intersections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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