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Women and men's perception of the effect of unemployment of the male partner on gender role perception, family communication and relational power within the familyNicolaai, Celeste January 1998 (has links)
Magister Artium (Human Ecology) - MA(HE) / The research focused on 60 coloured, Afrikaans-speaking men and women residing in Bell ville South who completed a structured questionnaire and open-ended interview questions. Their perceptions held on the influence of male unemployment on family relations with specific reference to gender role perception, relational satisfaction, communication, decision making, finances and labour within the family were investigated. Unemployment of the male partner was found to have no statistically significant differences for the manner in which males and females perceive their gender roles, finances and labour distribution within the family. Statistically significant differences were found for the manner in which males/and females perceive decision-making and communication within the family when the male partner is unemployed. The results revealed that unemployment does not have an influence on role perception and that the respondents uphold a traditional role perception. Decision making was not male dominated, as more egalitarian decision were taken. The respondents expressed combination gender roles with regard to management of finances and appeared to be satisfied with family and partner relations. The minority of respondents who experienced problems with communication attributed this to the consequences of being unemployed. Social agencies need to offer services to empower families to deal with the affects of unemployment on family life to ensure the survival of families during these challenging periods. A multi-disciplinary approach, provided by a team of professionals is the basis for recommendations for proposed support programme development, access and further research.
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Migration and body politics: a study of migrant women workers in Bellville, Cape TownChireka, Kudzai January 2015 (has links)
Magister Artium - MA / Migration has become very prominent in South Africa, and unlike most countries on the continent, it is an extremely prominent destinations for migrants. The country attracts migrants because there is a common perception that there are better economic opportunities, jobs and living conditions within South Africa. Countries like Zimbabwe, The Democratic Republic of Congo, Somalia, Senegal, Mozambique and Nigeria are statistically high ranking in migrants entering South Africa on a daily basis (Stats SA, 2011). Most forced migration research seeks to explain the behaviour, impact, and challenges faced by the displaced with the intention of influencing agencies and governments to develop more effective responses to
address the challenges. As a case study focusing on women, gender and migration at the micro-level, this study deals with the gendered and classed experiences and struggles of women migrants working as hairdressers in street salons in Bellville, Cape Town. The study explores how women who are socially marked as “other” in terms of gender, class, space, identity and nationality navigate an environment in which social worth and belonging is constantly defined by physical appearance and the environment in which the body is physically located. Through a feminist qualitative research method, the study focuses mainly on women’s experiences through interviews and participant observation. The research is therefore deeply
grounded and rooted in feminist theoretical perspective and feminist methodological
approaches in order to understand women’s lives and gender roles, their body politics and working lives. One of the major findings of this study is that the lack of a gendered analysis of migration has perpetuated stereotypes about who “migrants” are, what access they can have in a foreign country, in what ways they are considered “other”, and, most importantly, how they respond to their experiences of “othering” and political marginalization. It is argued that migration has been constantly changing: many contemporary migrant women are driven by adventure, desire and spirit, and not by famine, war, spouses and poverty. This study therefore develops recommendations for future researchers and policy makers in considering gender and the dynamic changes surrounding migration.
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Women and men's perception of the effect of unemployment of the male partner on gender role perception, family communication and relational power within the familyNicolaai, Celeste January 1998 (has links)
Magister Artium (Human Ecology) - MA(HE) / The research focused on 60 coloured, Afrikaans-speaking men and women residing in Bellville South who completed a structured
questionnaire and open-ended interview questions. Their perceptions held on the influence of male unemployment on family relations with specific reference to gender role perception, relational satisfaction, communication, decision making, finances and labour within the family were investigated. Unemployment of the male partner was found to have no statistically significant differences for the manner in which
males and females perceive their gender roles, finances and labour distribution within the family. Statistically significant differences were found for the manner in which males and females perceive decision-making and communication within the family when the male partner is unemployed. The results revealed that unemployment does not have an influence on role perception and that the respondents uphold a
traditional role perception. Decision making was not male dominated, as more egalitarian decision were taken. The respondents expressed combination gender roles with regard to management of finances and appeared to be satisfied with family and partner relations. The minority of respondents who experienced problems with communication attributed this to the consequences of being unemployed. The survival of families during these challenging periods. A Social agencies need to offer services to empower families to deal with the affects of unemployment on family life to ensure multi-disciplinary approach, provided by a team of professionals is the basis for recommendations for proposed support I programme development, access and further research.
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Geografiese aspekte van rekreasie en vryetydsbesteding in Bellville-SuidMcPherson, Elsworth Adam January 1987 (has links)
Magister Artium - MA / The way in which people utilise their FREE TIME [that is time left after all commitments (social and physiological) have been met] forms the central theme of this study. An important aspect of this theme for the geographer is the interaction between supply and demand of recreational facilities, because determines the spatial location of facilities in urban areas. In the South African society certain factors which influence the normal interaction between supply and demand have developed which can be identified as problems. In this study the problems which exist regarding recreation and the use of free time are examined with specific reference to the people living in Bellville South, a "Coloured" Group Area on the Cape Flats. Data for the study was collected with the air of a structured questionnaire and thereafter statistically analysed with the intention of answering the following questions: What is the nature and extent of the use of free time during
the day, over weekends and during vacations of the inhabitants of Bellville South? How does the politico-economic structure influence the supply of facilities for recreation in Bellville South? What is the influence of the politico-economic structure on the demand for facilities (the recreational behaviour) for the inhabitants of Bellville South? The data which had been collected with the aid of questionnaire, was further supplemented with personal interviews. In order to answer the above questions satisfactorily, recreation resource base in Bellville South was looked firstly. The local supply was measured according to national and international norms based on information obtained from the relevant literature. An attempt was made secondly to determine the demand for recreation generated by the community. It was evident from the
literature that the socio-economic level of communities played a vital role in the determination of the extent of their demand. By examining certain socio-economic parameters, it was found that the community of Bellville South consisted mostly of people from the working-class.
Subsequently the factors which have an influence on the recreational behaviour of the respondents during the day, weekend and vacation time-periods, were examined. It was found that, as one can expect from a predominantly working class community, recreation was mostly directed at the home environment during all three time-periods. This can be explained by referring to the constitutional constraints (Group Areas Act, Separate Amenities Act), socio-economic constraints and the inadequate recreational facilities in the study area. The interaction between demand and supply within the prevailing politico-economic structures was subsequently examined. The correlation between demographic and socio-economic variables and recreational activities was examined with the aid of crosstabulations. The resulting spatial pattern of the recreational behaviour of the respondents was analysed cartographically. By examining the latent and potential demand for recreational facilities it was found that there are very real needs in the study area. Lastly, recommendations were made with a view of alleviating the problems which have been identified. It was felt that immediate attention should be paid to shortcomings in the supply and
maintenance of recreational facilities in Bellville South, while the political problems which make a meaningful utilisation of recreational facilities by everybody in South Africa impossible at the moment, should also be removed.
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Research utilisation in policymaking : a case study of the Centre for the Study of Higher Education at the University of the Western CapeKulati, Tembile 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil)--Stellenbosch University, 2005. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The aim of this thesis is to explore the relationship between research and
policymaking in South African higher education, using the Education Policy
Unit at the University of the Western Cape (UWC-EPU) -recently renamed the
Centre for the Study of Higher Education - as a case study. The study begins
by examining the various models that explain the nature of policymaking in
Western democracies, as well as the main theoretical frameworks - namely
the "two communities" theory and the enlightenment model of knowledge
utilisation - that explain the relationship between the production of knowledge
and its utilisation in policymaking. It is argued that, although most of these
models were developed to analyse the policymaking process within the
context of mature democracies, they nonetheless raise important issues for
developing countries like South Africa.
The study proceeds to provide an overview of the process of policy
development in South Africa. It is suggested that a better way of
understanding the evolution of higher education policy development in South
Africa is to see it as having gone through four phases, each of which marks a
significant turning point within higher education itself, as well as in the broader
political context. The process of the policy development, and in particular the
role of (higher education) research within it, is shown as one that was largely
driven by political and ideological imperatives.
The study then shifts to a discussion of the CSHE, commencing with an
overview of its organisational history, and highlighting the main objectives of
its research programme and the changes that occurred with regard to its
research orientation. These are examined in relation to external factors - for
example the shift from the development of policy frameworks to the focus on
implementation - and in terms of the dynamics that were internal to the
University of the Western Cape. This discussion also highlights the challenges that were faced by the EPUs and other progressive academics in
the early phases of the policy development process, namely that of engaging
in a 'reconstructive' agenda on the one hand, while undertaking
intellectual/scientific work on the other hand. In the case of the CSHE, there
was also the added challenge of contributing to the development of the
nascent field of higher education studies.
One of the key issues that emerge in the analysis of the interviews, which
form the core source of data collection for this study, is the multifarious
understanding of the way in which the research undertaken by the CSHE was
to be utilised. The three notions of 'use' that are highlighted - which are also
embedded in the objectives of the CSHE as set out in its constitution - are the
following:
• Utilisation as generation of ideas, and particularly as a contribution to
the debates on social reconstruction
• Utilisation as input into the policymaking process
• Utilisation as contribution to scholarship
The study shows that there is a mixed assessment of the extent to which the
CSHE was able to address these competing - and sometimes contradictory -
challenges. In the main, its efforts were hamstrung by a confluence of factors,
ranging from its inability to recruit or attract experienced researchers, to the
orientation of its research towards critique, something which was a feature of
the scholarship emanating from the progressive academic community at the
time. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die doel van hierdie tesis is om die verhouding tussen navorsing en
beleidsvorming binne die konteks van die Suid- Afrikaanse hoër
onderwysomgewing te ondersoek. Met die oog hierop word die Education
Policy Unit aan die Universiteit van Wes-Kaapland (UWC-EPU), onlangs
herdoop tot die Centre for the Study of Higher Education (CHSE), deur middel
van 'n gevallestudie beskryf. Die studie begin met 'n ondersoek na die
verskillende modelle wat poog om die aard van beleidsvorming binne
Westerse demokrasieë te verduidelik. Verder word die hoof teoretiese
raamwerke, tewete die "two communities" teorie asook die "enlightenment
model", wat die verhouding tussen die skep van kennis en die aanwending
daarvan binne 'n beleidskonteks wil verduidelik, ook ondersoek. Hoewel die
meeste modelle van hierdie aard ontwikkel is om die proses van
beleidsvorming binne volwasse demokrasieë te analiseer, word aangevoer
dat hulle desnieteenstaande belangrike kwessies na vore bring vir
ontwikkelende lande soos Suid-Afrika.
Die studie gaan verder deur 'n oorsig te gee oor die proses van
beleidsontwikkeling in Suid- Afrika. Daar word gesuggereer dat 'n meer
verantwoorde wyse om die evolusie van hoër onderwysbeleid in Suid-Afrika te
verstaan, sou wees om erkenning te gee aan 'n vier-fase-benadering,
waarvan elk 'n betekenisvolle rigtingverandering aangedui het, sowel as die
invloed van die breër politieke konteks. Die proses van beleidsontwikkeling,
en meer spesifiek die rol van (hoër onderwys) navorsing daarbinne, word
aangetoon as synde hoofsaaklik gemotifeer deur politieke en ideologiese
imperatiewe.
Hierna verskuif die fokus van die studie na 'n bespreking van die CSHE deur
te begin met 'n oorsig oor die geskiedenis van die sentrum. Die hoof doelwitte
van die sentrum se navorsingsprogram asook die veranderinge wat onlangs
plaasgevind ten opsigte van navorsingsoriëntasie, word bespreek. Hierdie aspekte word ondersoek aan die hand van eksterne faktore - byvoorbeeld die
verskuiwing wat plaasgevind het vanaf die klem op ontwikkelingsraamwerke
na 'n fokus op implimentering - en in terme van die dinamika wat eie is en
was aan die Universiteit van Wes Kaapland. Die gesprek poog verder om lig
te werp op die tipiese uitdagings waarmee Education Policy Units en
navorsers in hierdie veld mee te doen gehad het in die beginjare van die
beleidsontwikkelingsproses, naamlik om vanuit 'n rekonstruktiewe agenda te
opereer en terselftertyd betrokke te wees met navorsing op 'n akademiese en
wetenskaplike vlak. In die geval van die CSHE, het die verdere uitdaging om
deurlopend bydraes tot die veld van hoër onderwysstudies te lewer, hoë eise
aan die eenheid gestel.
'n Sleutelaspek wat na vore gekom het tydens die analise van die onderhoude
(laasgenoemde vorm die sentrale bron van vir die data-versameling van die
studie) is dat uiteenlopende interpretasies bestaan van hoe die navorsing
soos deur die CSHE onderneem, benut behoort te word. Die drie
perspektiewe op benutting ("use") wat uitgelig word, en wat In sentrale deel
van die doelwitte van die CSHE uitmaak soos in die grondwet van die sentrum
vervat, is die volgende:
• Benutting as die skep van idees, en in die besonder as 'n bydrae tot
debatte oor sosiale rekonstruksie
• Benutting as inset tot die proses van beleidmaking
• Benutting as bydrae tot navorsing
Die studie toon aan dat die maniere waarop die CSHE in staat was om hierdie
kompeterende, en soms teensprekende, uitdagings te hanteer, op
uiteenlopende wyses geëvalueer was. In hoofsaak is die pogings van die
sentrum aan bande gelê deur 'n sameloop van verskillende faktore wat
gestrek het vanaf die probleem om ervare navorsers te lok en aan te stel tot
met die probleem om sy navorsing aan te pas en te heroriënteer gegrond op
kritiese stemme, dikwels die gevolg van die progressiewe akademiese
gemeenskap van die tyd.
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Cardiovascular disease risk profile of the South-African mixed ancestry population with high incidence of diabetes mellitus: baseline and three year follow-upSoita, David Jonah January 2013 (has links)
THESIS SUBMITED IN FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENT FOR THE
AWARD OF THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF TECHNOLOGY OF BIOMEDICAL
TECHNOLOGTY IN THE FACULTY OF HEALTH AND WELLNESS SCIENCES
AT THE CAPE PENINSULA UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY
SUPERVISORS: PROF T.E. MATSHA
PROF R.T. ERASMUS
DR A. ZEMLIN
SUBMITED DECEMBER 2013 / Introduction: Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) have become the leading cause of morbidity and mortality amongst the global population. Originally thought to be a health burden of high income countries, the prevalence is rapidly increasing in developing countries. For example, in 2008, an estimated 17.3 million died from CVD, and 80% of these (13.8 mil) were from low to middle income countries. Epidemiological data on CVD in Africa is scanty and of poor quality and national vital registration is available in only 5% of Africa’s 53 countries. Furthermore, data on CVD risk amongst the South African population and specifically the mixed ancestry community is poorly described. The increasing global population of people with CVD has been largely attributed to increasing rates of determinants and risk factors which include obesity, metabolic syndrome (MetS), type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) and chronic kidney diseases (CKD). The prevalence of DM in South Africa is known to be on the rise with more affected communities being South African Asians followed by coloureds.
Aims and objectives: The aim of this study was to determine the CVD risk profile of the Bellville South community during a baseline and three year follow-up study, by assessment of known risk factors, MetS, type 2 DM, obesity and CKD.
Methods: Participants for this study were drawn from an urban community of the Bellville South suburb of Cape Town. At baseline (January 2008 and March 2009) 946 individuals aged 16 to 95 participated. All participants received a standardized interview and physical examination during which anthropometric measurements were performed three times and their average used for analysis: weight (kg), height (cm), waist (cm) and hip (cm) circumferences. Body Mass Index (BMI) was calculated as weight per square metre (kg/m2). A blood sample was obtained from all participants after an overnight fast for the determination of biochemical profiles: glucose, glycated haemoglobin, creatinine, total cholesterol, high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), triglycerides and low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) which was calculated using Friedewald’s formula. Kidney function test was assessed through estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) using the cockcroft-Gault and MDRD equations. Blood pressure was measured according to the World Health Organisation (WHO) guidelines. Participants with no history of doctor diagnosed DM underwent a 75 g oral glucose tolerance test as recommended by the WHO. Metabolic syndrome was determined using JIS, NCEP ATPIII and IDF criteria. The follow-up examination was conducted in 2011 (3 years from vii
baseline) using similar procedures. A total of 198 participants formed the follow-up cohort whose measurements were compared to those of the baseline. Finally, the prediction and processes/progression of the risk factors were determined.
Results: At both baseline and follow-up studies, females had a higher BMI compared to their male counterparts. The crude prevalence of type 2 DM, including the previously diagnosed type 2 DM was 28.59% (age-adjusted = 33.5%, 95%CI: 30.01 – 36.92), and that of undiagnosed type 2 DM was 17.8% (age-adjusted = 12.4%, 95%CI: 9.8 – 14.8). The overall prevalence of CKD was 28.7% (269) and was higher in females (31.4%) compared to 20.2% in males. MetS was present in 46.5% of the participants. Gender-specific prediction for CVD risk calculated using the 30-year CVD interactive risk calculator showed that high CVD risk was present in normoglycaemic and younger subjects (under 35 years). At follow-up, the cumulative incidence of progression in glucose tolerance status was: 16.2% (32 participants including 11 with new-onset diabetes), and increased in a stepwise fashion with the number of components of MetS. Between baseline and 3-year evaluation glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) increased by 8.7 ml/min (95% confidence interval: 6.9-10.7), reflecting variables trajectories across baseline strata of kidney functions.
Conclusion: Given the findings of this study and the estimated increases in the determinants and risk factors of CVD in the mixed ancestry population of South Africa this trend may continue to worsen if current trajectories do not change.
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