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Gemeenskapsontwikkeling op kommersiële plaseGrobbelaar, Jan Gysbert 28 August 2012 (has links)
M.A. / The modern day approach towards community development is to facilitate a community-driven and self-sustaining development process. Development is a process by which the members of a society increase their personal and institutional capacities, mobilise and manage resources, produce sustainable and justly distribute improvements in their quality of life consistent with their aspirations. The reasons why farm workers in commercial agricultural communities are becoming involved in their own development; what motivates them; and the capacities they need to remain involved; are some of the areas that this study addresses. This study focuses on the labour-extensive and labour-intensive farming communities in the Boland/Swartland regions of the Western Cape Province. A purposeful non-probability sample was taken from five labourextensive and five labour-intensive commercial farming communities within a fifty kilometre radius of Wellington. Focus groups as method were used to interview the specifically selected respondents. Qualitative data was collected according to a participatory research method and a visualization technique was utilized to record the data. Some of the important results of this study indicate that the commercial farmer has to take an interest as an important resource and partner in the development of the farm worker's communties. The farmworker's communities are seeking support from the new democratic structures, the Transitional Rural Councils, to assist them with their development efforts. The process of developing ownership and taking responsability for one's own development, needs to be strengthened by including the farmworkers in the decision-taking process on farms regarding community development through structures like farm-forums or farm-committees.
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Knowledge, attitudes and practices of farmworkers regarding schistosomiasis in Vuvha Community in Vhembe District, Limpopo Province, South AfricaNenzhelele, Fulufhelo 29 January 2016 (has links)
MPH / Department of Public Health
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Workplace deviance : a case of selected farm workersMaluka, Harriet Rivalani January 2021 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D. Com. (Human Resource Management)) -- University of Limpopo, 2021 / The purpose of this study was to explore workplace deviance, both constructive and
destructive deviance, in order to understand and develop strategies that could be
used to address different types of deviant behaviours amongst farm workers.
Qualitative, explorative and descriptive research designs within the paradigm of
constructivism were utilised to obtain rich and valuable data with regards to the
participants’ views, experiences and meanings relating to workplace deviance,
through a narrative approach to inquiry. Semi-structured interviews, using a critical
incident technique, were employed in order to collect data on both constructive
deviant behaviour and destructive deviant behaviour of farm workers from the
research participants. Farm workers (n=30) and supervisors (n=9) from three farms
belonging to the same conglomerate participated in the study. Thematic analysis
was used to analyse the collected narrative data on farm workers’ workplace
deviance. The study highlighted that both forms of workplace deviance, namely;
constructive and destructive workplace deviance, seem to exist amongst farm
workers. The various forms of constructive deviant and destructive deviant
behaviours, which farm workers were more likely to engage in were identified. The
constructive deviant behaviours were found to assist the farms in realising their
objectives, while the destructive deviant behaviours seemed to negatively jeopardise
the wellbeing of the farms. The managerial strategies which could be used in the
farming sector in order to manage workplace deviance in a more holistic manner
were identified. These included practices to encourage workers to engage in
constructive deviant behaviours, while discouraging them from engaging in
destructive deviant behaviours. The managerial practices revealed in this study may
assist farm management to manage farm workers in such a way that may enhance
the farms’ competitiveness.
KEY CONCEPTS
Workplace deviance; Destructive deviant behaviour; Constructive deviant behaviour;
Farming sector; Farm workers.
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Contested rights : the impact of game farming on farm workers in the Bushmen's River areaLuck, Kelly January 2004 (has links)
This thesis is an investigation of the impact of commercial game farming on former farm workers in the Bushman's River area of the Eastern Cape. In its examination of the broader economic and political changes that have facilitated a move from agriculture to game farming, it analyses how these changes affect farm workers. The main concern of the thesis is the ways in which farm workers (at the local level) respond to changes at the national and global level (legal and political changes, the advent of tourism, and the injection of foreign capital and businessmen into the area). Lack of knowledge about their rights under the current political dispensation, as well as the perceived need for mediation between themselves and foreign landowners, points to a general sense of powerlessness. Feelings of alienation from local government structures aimed at fulfilling this function indicate a significant gap between the statute at the national level and the local reality. Local reality is informed by a strong conservatism which is generated by African Independent Church structures and local Xhosa perceptions of manhood and respectability. This conservative discourse leads to a frame of reference which is largely informed by pre-1994 interactions with farmers and government. This results in a situation in which farm workers, largely unaware of their rights in the new dispensation, operate as they did in the past; waiting for landowners to decide their fate for them. What ensues is a lack of meaningful interaction with government and landowners, perpetuating their subjugation and cynicism as to whether government structures are in fact working in their interests. The thesis comes to three main conclusions. The first is that game farming has been negatively received by farm workers due to the associated threats of unemployment and eviction. The second is that despite high levels of subjugation, even the very poor are agents to some degree. The creation of a masculine identity which is internally articulated, as opposed to outwardly expressed, and the grounding of reputation in the family suggest that farm workers have developed mechanisms to deal with their disempowered position. Lastly, farm workers are in possession of social capital which has made it possible for them to deal with their low status in the societal hierarchy. This includes the Church, family and fellow community members. These coping strategies have however proved a disadvantage in the current era because they prevent direct communication with landowners, government and NGOs.
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Investigating aspects of corporate citizenship on private game farms: the case of Mtshelezi Game Reserve in Makana Municipality, Eastern Cape ProvinceNyama, Cynthia January 2008 (has links)
Research show that post 1996 period has experienced an unprecedented increase in game based operations. The corporate citizenship or corporate social responsibility of the game reserves is of much interest to this study with a focus on the rights of previous and current occupants of farms, workers’ well-being, job creation, quality of life and poverty alleviation within the game/tourism industry. The research was conducted as a qualitative case study and the tools employed for data gathering include: a review of the relevant literature, interviews (face-to-face), the administering of a questionnaire survey and document analysis from diversity of resources which include the Department of Labour, East Cape Agricultural Research Project, and through use of multiple data sources. The approach taken in this dissertation is to examine to what extent the private game reserves in the Makana Municipality can be labelled as “corporate citizens” and this was done by means of a case study of one private game reserve. The areas that are deemed to be most important in this regard are (i) employment history (ii) educational opportunities (iii) wages (iv) housing (v) land tenure. The study established that younger, better educated people are likely to secure better paying employment on PGR. The nature and conditions of sale of the farm to the PGR can impact on the employment secured by workers in the new dispensation. Workers are tied to these jobs because of the very long hours that prevent them from doing anything else to earn money. Some of the workers had opportunities to learn new skills but the question remains; which people are these and how long will growing differentials in earnings reproduce the poorly educated worker in the next generation. The study also high lightened the need for academics and researchers to come with a common set of corporate citizenship measures such as to measure corporate social impacts.
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Evaluating the performance of farmworker participation schemes in the Western Cape ProvinceNdlozi, Collen Vusi 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MScAgric)--Stellenbosch University, 2005. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: It is generally acknowledged that South African commercial agriculture will
have to be restructured to integrate the previously disadvantaged communities
in the agricultural economy of the country. This is so because of the prevailing
disparities between agriculture amongst the black societies and the traditional
"white" commercial agriculture. After the inception of the ANC governance in
1994, affirmative action measures viz inequalities and inequitable access to
resources and markets became necessary to remove these imbalances.
However, it is not seen as a quick fix; it will take decades to eradicate the
imbalances created during the period of apartheid rule.
A farmworker equity-sharing scheme (FWESS) was first introduced at the
Whitehall farm in the Grabouw area of the Western Cape in 1992. The South
African Department of Land Affairs adopted this strategy in the face of land
reform as one of the major Land Redistribution for Agricultural Development
programmes to provide basic support to the farmworkers in order to enable
them to participate in the financial stakes of the commercial farming in South
Africa.
The main research objective of this study was to evaluate the performance of
FWESSs and assess the contribution of the programme to the improvement of
the living standards of the previously disadvantaged individuals, viz
farmworkers. This was achieved through a survey, which included five
FWESSs administered by the Cape Town regional office of the Department of
Land Affairs (DLA). Interviews were conducted amongst the ordinary
farmworkers, members of the board of worker trustees and the original
owners. Among other things, the motivations, characteristics of governance,
socio-economic factors and financial performance of the schemes were
evaluated.
It is evident from the investigation that the original owners are in the forefront
in the initiation of the equity-sharing schemes on their farms. Job security was
shown as the most important motivation by some farmworkers for their
participation in equity-sharing schemes, while other shareholders (original owners) indicated that the initial capital injection in the business and the
empowerment of the farmworkers through capital appreciation and dividends
was the most important motivation. Equity-sharing schemes are a relative new
concept in farms that were included in this study and after the initial negative
impact with the change in the management of the organisation, the schemes
are faring good financially. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Dit word algemeen erken dat die Suid-Afrikaanse kommersiële landboubedryf
herstrukturering sal moet ondergaan om voorheen-benadeelde gemeenskappe
by die landbou-ekonomie van die land te integreer. Dit is toe te skryf aan die
ongelykhede wat ten opsigte van die landboubedryf tussen swart
gemeenskappe en die tradisionele "blanke" landboubedryf bestaan. Na die
bewindoomame van die ANC-regering in 1994, is maatreëls vir regstellende
aksie ten opsigte van ongelykheid en onregverdige toegang tot hulpbronne en
markte in werking gestelom hierdie ongelykhede uit die weg te ruim. 'n
Kitsoplossing is egter nie moontlik nie; dit sal tientalle jare neem om die
ongelykhede wat gedurende die apartheidsbewind geskep is, uit te wis.
Die eerste plaaswerker kapitaaldelingskema is in 1992 op die Whitehall-plaas
in die Grabouw-distrik van die Wes-Kaap ingestel. Die Suid-Afrikaanse
Departement van Grondsake het hierdie strategie as een van die
hoofprogramme vir grondherverdeling vir die ontwikkeling van die
landboubedryf aanvaar, om basiese steun aan die plaasarbeiders te verleen om
hulle in staat te stelom 'n deel in die finansiele belang van die kommersiële
landboubedryf in Suid -Afrika te verkry.
Die hoof navorsingsdoelwit van hierdie studie was om die uitwerking van die
plaaswerker kapitaaldelingskema te evalueer en die bydrae van die program
tot die verbetering van die lewenskwaliteit van voorheen-benadeelde
individue, naamlik plaasarbeiders, te beoordeel. Dit is bewerkstellig deur
middel van 'n opname wat die vyf plaaswerker kapitaaldelingskemas wat deur
die Departement Grondsake se streekkantoor in Kaapstad geadministreer
word, te betrek. Onderhoude is met gewone plaasarbeiders, lede van die raad
van arbeidertrustees en die oorspronklike eienaars gevoer. Evaluering is onder
andere gerig op die motivering agter deelname aan die skemas, kenmerke van
die bestuur daarvan, sosio-ekonomiese faktore en die finansiële prestasie van
die skemas.
Dit het uit die ondersoek duidelik geword dat die oorspronklike eienaars die
voortou geneem het met die inisiriëng van die kapitaaldelingskemas op hul
plase. Werksekuriteit is as die belangrikste motivering deur plaasarbeiders gegee vir die deelneming aan die kapitaaldelingskemas, terwyl die ander
deelnemers (oorspronklike eienaars) die aanvanklike kapitaal-inspuiting in die
boerderyen die bemagtiging van die plaasarbeiders deur kapitaalappresiasie
en dividende as die belangrikste motiverings aangedui het.
Kapitaaldelingskemas is 'n relatiewe nuwe konsep by boerderye wat in hierdie
studie betrek is en na die aanvanklike negatiewe bëinvloeding met die
verandering in die bestuur van die organisasie, is die skemas besig om
finansiël goed te vaar.
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Evaluation of the performance of equity-sharing schemes administered by the Department of Land Affairs, Worcester district office of the Western Cape ProvinceRalehoko, Enoch Ntala 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MAgricAdmin)--Stellenbosch University, 2005. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The study evaluated farmworker equity-sharing schemes administered by the
Worcester regional office of the Department of Land Affairs in the Western Cape.
The objectives were to investigate the performance of farmworker equity-sharing
schemes against recent literature, to evaluate the motivation for the establishment of
these schemes and whether they served the purpose for which they were established.
Through investigating the role these schemes play in improving the farmworkers '
livelihood, the study investigated the changes farmworkers experienced on the farm
since the establishment of the schemes. The perceptions of farmworkers regarding the
schemes were also investigated.
The study found that at all the farms evaluated there was a lack of formal training to
all the levels of farmworkers, including committee members and shareholder workers.
These farms did not have the funds to finance training programmes for their
farmworkers. Poor training impeded farmworkers to utilise their skills and participate
in decision making on the farm. Contrary to the objectives of financial participation
and farmworker equity-sharing schemes, most of these schemes did not achieve the
broad objectives of the participation schemes such as empowering their workers.
Living and working conditions seem to have improved on most of the farms although
some farms seem to have experienced no change at all. The ESTA Laws could be the
cause of the improvements in housing and working conditions but not the
implementation of the farmworker equity-sharing schemes. Respondents did not seem
to experience discrimination due to gender. Financially the schemes are not
performing well. This is evident from the number of schemes that were liquidated due
to financial problems and for which financial statements could not be obtained. These
schemes face various institutional and structural challenges, which includes financial
challenges. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie het plaaswerker-aandeelhouerskemas wat deur die Worcesterstreekskantoor
van die Departement van Grondsake in die Wes-Kaap bestuur word,
geëvalueer. Die oogmerke van die studie was om die verrigting van plaaswerkeraandeelhouerskemas
teenoor onlangse literatuur te ondersoek, om die motivering vir
die vestiging van hierdie skemas te evalueer en te bepaal of hulle wel die doel dien
waarvoor hulle gevestig is. Deur die rol van hierdie skemas in die verbetering van
plaaswerkers se bestaan te ondersoek, het die studie ook ondersoek ingestel na die
veranderinge wat sedert die vestiging van die skemas deur plaaswerkers ervaar is. Die
plaaswerkers se persepsies van die skemas is ook ondersoek.
Die studie het bevind dat daar by al die plase wat betrek is 'n tekort aan formele
opleiding aan al die vlakke van plaaswerkers was, met inbegrip van komiteelede en
aandeelhouer-werkers. Hierdie plase het nie oor die fondse beskik om
opleidingsprogramme vir hulle plaaswerkers te finansier nie. Swak opleiding strem
plaaswerkers in die toepassing van hulle vaardighede en in hulle deelname aan
besluitneming op die plaas. In stryd met die doelwitte van finansiële deelname en
plaaswerker-aandeelhouerskemas het hierdie skemas nie in hulle doel geslaag nie.
Woon- en werksomstandighede op die meeste plase het blykbaar sedert die vestiging
van die skemas verbeter, alhoewel sommige plase skynbaar geen vemaderinge
ondergaan het nie. Die Wet op die Uitbreiding van Sekerheid op Verblyfreg kan 'n
verklaring vir die verbetering in behuising en werksomstandighede wees, en nie
noodwendig die implementering van die plaaswerker-aandeelhouerskemas nie.
Respondente het volgens alle aanduidings nie diskriminasie op grond van geslag
ondervind nie. Die skemas presteer finansieel nie goed nie. Dit is duidelik uit die getal
skemas wat as gevolg van finansiële probleme gelikwideer is en waarvoor finansiële
state nie verkry kon word nie. Hierdie skemas staar verskeie institusionele en
strukturele uitdagings in die gesig, waaronder ook finansiële uitdagings.
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Biodiversity conservation and land rights in South Africa : whither the farm dwellers?Crane, Wendy 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil (Public Management and Planning))--University of Stellenbosch, 2006. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: South Africa is unique in that its globally significant biodiversity, which is under major threat,
coexists with an apartheid history of dispossession that produced a starkly unequal land
ownership pattern and widespread rural poverty. It is in this context that the post-apartheid
government must fulfil constitutional and international obligations to safeguard environmental
assets as well as undertake land reform benefiting the previously dispossessed. Consequently,
there is a continuous challenge of reconciling complex and often conflicting relationships
between poverty, inequitable access to resources, and the protection of biodiversity. Current
efforts to conserve the Cape Floral Kingdom emphasise partnerships between private
landowners and existing nature reserves to promote sustainable utilisation of biodiversity. This
paper explores the potential impact of this approach on farm dwellers, and how changing land
use may affect their land tenure rights and livelihoods. Primary research was undertaken in the
Baviaanskloof, where this model is in an early stage of implementation. The paper identifies
systemic and structural tensions in current attempts to reconcile biodiversity conservation and
farm dwellers’ interests, and documents issues of process and principle that could become
important in the future. In doing so, it highlights the influence of on-farm power relations and
highly complex institutional arrangements in determining the real extent of participation by
affected farm dwellers and the efficacy of social safeguard policies. Findings also caution
against an over-reliance on ecotourism as the major occupation and argues instead for support
to multiple livelihood strategies.
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Understanding the legacy of dependency and powerlessness experienced by farm workers on wine farms in the Western CapeFalletisch, Leila Ann 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M Social Work (Social Work))--University of Stellenbosch, 2008. / This research investigates the powerlessness and dependency on wine farms in
the Western Cape from the viewpoint of an understanding the lived experience of
farm labourers and the high incidence of habitual drinking, violence and other
social phenomena.
The first farm labourers in the Western Cape were Slaves. When Slavery was
abolished in 1834, Cape Slaves were freed but not compensated and so remained
on farms, working as labourers, and powerless and dependent.
After slavery had been abolished, the relationship between landowner and
labourer evolved into a paternalistic relationship where the labourer was tied to a
particular farm through housing, debt ,economic impoverishment and political
marginalisation.
Over the last few decades constitutional and political developments have resulted
in changes to labour laws and working conditions on farms. Change has filtered
down to the level of labourer at different rates in different areas. By and large, while
working conditions may have improved, many labourers remain dependent and
powerless to become masters of their own destiny. They remain unable to break
free of the legacy of Slavery.
Slavery is not the only legacy that casts a shadow over farm labourers. The
infamous Tot System, initiated by Jan van Riebeeck and continuing late into the
twentieth century, has enslaved many labourers in a cycle of habitual drinking,
social violence and poverty. Habitual drinking has become the norm on farms, a
weekend ritual that few labourers manage to escape.
The purpose of this research is to broaden the field of knowledge for practitioners
and organisations dealing with substance abuse and other social problems on
farms. One particular farm is used as a sample of farm life. The farm in question has a
children’s programme (crèche and after–school). There have also been several
attempts over the last five years at social development and income–generation
projects aimed at empowering adults on the farm. The experience of the farm
management when attempting to introduce and establish these projects has been
an overwhelming sense of immobilisation and apathy from the labourers.
The empirical research used a qualitative method to examine (by means of semi
structured interviews and questionnaires) themes of hopelessness, dependency
and powerlessness. The meaning and particular pattern of habitual drinking on
farms was also explored through interviews and questionnaires.
There is evidence that habitual drinking continues on wine farms, generation after
generation. It has become a legitimate way of life, a ritual so entrenched, that the
community cannot imagine life any other way. To not drink is to place oneself in the
position of outsider, opening oneself up to ridicule, disdain and verbal abuse.
Individuals who do give up drinking do so as a result of an external threat rather
than a conscious choice to change the course of their lives.
Furthermore, this study found that farm labourers consistently surrender
responsibility for their children, their homes their behaviour, while they cling to the
remnants of paternalism, avoiding at all costs becoming masters of their own
destinies.
This study indicates that the abolishment of the tot system has not significantly
reduced the incidence of habitual excessive drinking. Whilst achieving sobriety is a
key intervention in achieving social harmony, in isolation, the outlook for sustained
success is poor.
Working for change on wine farms is not the exclusive domain of any one role
player. In any geographical area a partnership between farming communities is
needed to address labourers’ needs, and gaps and overlaps in service delivery. A
comprehensive plan should be formulated by all role players with the
empowerment of workers as the key outcome. Concerning social and domestic violence, a zero tolerance of abuse and violence
needs to be taken by farm management and implemented, making use of
legislation and law enforcement agencies.
Early childhood development, educational enrichment and primary health care
facilities are essential services on farms and should be staffed by qualified
professionals dedicated to the upliftment and empowerment of farming
communities.
Finally there remains a need for further research into accessible, appropriate and
sustainable intervention strategies on farms that empower labourers and break the
cycles of habitual excessive drinking, social violence and hopelessness on farms.
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Opportunity and constraint : historicity, hybridity and notions of cultural identity among farm workers in the Sundays River ValleyConnor, Teresa Kathleen January 2007 (has links)
This thesis focuses on relationships of opportunity and constraint among farm workers in the Sundays River Valley (SRV), Eastern Cape Province. Relationships of 'constraint' include those experiences of displacement and forced removal and war, including forced removals by the apartheid state in 1960 and 1970. Relationships of 'opportunity' include the ways in which residents in the SRV have contested their experiences of upheaval and domination, and the formation of a regional sense of place and belonging/ investigate how farm workers actually draw elements of locality and identity from their experiences of upheaval, and how displacement bolsters feelings of belonging and place. Instead of viewing displacement as a once-off experience, this thesis investigates displacement in historical terms, as a long-term, 'serial' experience of human movement, which is continued in the present- specifically through the creation of the Greater Addo Elephant National Park. I concentrate on developing a spatialised and cultural notion of movemenUplacement. 'Place' is investigated as a term that refers to rather indeterminate feelings of nostalgia, memory and identity, which depend on a particular connection to territory (ie: 'space'). I emphasise that elements of place in the SRV are drawn from and expressed along dualistic lines, which juxtapose situations of opportunity and constraint. In this way, farm workers' sense of connection to farms and ancestral territory in the SRV depends on their experiences of stable residency and work on farms, as well as their memories of removal from land in the area. I emphasise that those elements of conservatism (expressed as 'tradition' and Redness) among Xhosa-speaking farm workers are indications of a certain hybridity of identity in the region, which depend on differentiation from other groups (such as so-called 'coloured' farm workers and 'white' farmers), as well as associations between these groups. This thesis lays emphasis upon those less visible and definable 'identities' in the Eastern Cape Province, specifically by shifting focus away from the exhomeland states of the Ciskei and Transkei, to more marginal expressions of identity and change (among farm workers) in the Province. I point out that labourers cannot solely be defined by their positions as farm workers, but by their place and sense of cultural belonging in the area. In this sense, I use the idea of work as a loaded concept that can comment on a range of cultural attitudes towards belonging and place, and which is firmly embedded in the private lives of labourers - beyond their simple socio-economic conditions of farm work. I use Bourdieu's conception of habitus and doxa to define work as a set of dispositions that have been historicised and internalised by workers to such an extent, that relationships of domination are sometimes inadvertently obscured through their apparent 'naturalness'. Moreover, I point out that work can be related to ritualised action in the SRV through the use of performance and practice-based anthropological theory. Both work and ritual are symbolic actions, and are sites of struggle within which workers express themselves dualistically. Rituals, specifically, are dramatic events that combine disharmonious and harmonious social processes - juxtaposing the powerlessness of workers (on farms), and the deep sense of belonging and place in the SRV. I argue that the deep historical connections in the SRV have largely been ignored by conservationists in the drive to establish new protected zones (such as the Greater Addo Elephant National Park), and that a new model of shared conservation management is needed for this Park.
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