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Turning points : exploring power transitions in an incremental upgrading process in Enkanini, StellenboschWessels, Berry Steenkamp 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil)--Stellenbosch University, 2015. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study explored whether co-production of knowledge could contribute to shifting
power from government to citizens in an incremental upgrading process. It is
premised on the notion that such a shift is desirable. The title of the study Turning
points: Exploring power transitions in an incremental upgrading process in Enkanini,
Stellenbosch indicates the complex, transient and shifting power dynamics at play in
the illegal settlement of Enkanini in Stellenbosch.
The study was conducted within a larger transdisciplinary research framework
seeking to implement socio-technical innovations, generated through a co-production
of knowledge process with settlement residents, to move Enkanini towards becoming
a sustainable human settlement. A case study provides an overview of engagement
the residents have had with the local Stellenbosch Municipality, NGOs and academic
researchers from the Sustainability Institute, Stellenbosch University. It is
complemented by the personal narrative of one of the first residents who moved
there in 2006. From personal observations, interaction with residents and coresearchers,
meeting notes, the literature review and a grounded experience over
the three-year study period, four turning points were identified.
These four turning points, interpreted as bifurcations that could open up new ways of
engaging with the present to determine alternative futures are explored dialectically.
The initial problem for each is described, followed by the response and the resultant
challenge that emerged. The four turning points were the initiation of the iShack
concept, the start of the iShack Project, the iShack stakeholders meeting and the
establishment of the Enkanini Research Centre.
As power, in both visible and invisible forms, manifested itself in this volatile
settlement and in awareness that the researchers role held power and that the
researcher’s sets of knowledge, assumptions and prejudices could affect both
research process and outcome, there was a need to find complementary
methodologies to the main transdisciplinary research framework.
Indigenous research methodologies spoke directly to power and the importance of
capacity building and empowering research participants (shifting them to coresearchers),
while reflexive research methodologies allowed the disciplined
reflection and re-reflection to ameliorate influencing of process and outcome. In
addition, each overcame the limitations of the other, in particular the limitation of
transdisciplinary research that does not take power dynamics into account. This
resulted in the creation of a methodological triad and a conceptual mechanism
through which to view the results, termed co-arising.
The three themes that had emerged during the process – understanding through
knowledge co-production, capacity building through the awareness of power
dynamics and engagement with the research space – are fused in this notion of coarising
served by the methodological triad.
The turning points, or bifurcations, were analysed through an “open” coding system
used in grounded theory to minimise pre-conditions determining the outcome. Three
dominant categories emerged – empowerment, identity and agency – as
determinants for shifting power from government to citizens through effective coproduction
of knowledge in an incremental upgrading process. The study concludes
with recommendations for future research. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie wou vasstel of die medeproduksie van kennis kan bydra tot ’n
magsverskuiwing vanaf die regering na burgers in ’n trapsgewyse
opgraderingsproses. Dit het van die veronderstelling uitgegaan dat so ’n verskuiwing
wenslik sal wees. Die titel van die studie, Turning points: Exploring power transitions
in an incremental upgrading process in Enkanini, Stellenbosch, dui op die komplekse,
veranderlike en verskuiwende magsdinamiek in die onwettige nedersetting Enkanini
op Stellenbosch.
Die navorsing is binne ’n groter kruisdissiplinêre navorsingsraamwerk onderneem
wat toegespits was op die inwerkingstelling van sosio-tegniese innovasies om
Enkanini in ’n volhoubare menslike nedersetting te omskep. Die innovasies is deur
medeproduksie van kennis in samewerking met inwoners van die nedersetting
ontwikkel. ’n Gevallestudie bied ’n oorsig van skakeling tussen inwoners en die
plaaslike Stellenbosch Munisipaliteit, nieregeringsorganisasies en akademiese
navorsers van die Volhoubaarheidsinstituut aan die Universiteit Stellenbosch. Dit
word aangevul deur die persoonlike verhaal van een van die eerste Enkaniniinwoners,
wat in 2006 daar ingetrek het. Persoonlike waarnemings, interaksie met
inwoners en medenavorsers, aantekeninge by vergaderings, die literatuuroorsig en
praktiese ervaring oor die studietydperk van drie jaar het vier keerpunte na vore
gebring.
Hierdie vier keerpunte kan vertolk word as bifurkasies wat kan lei tot ’n nuwe
benadering tot die hede vir die skep van ’n alternatiewe toekoms. ’n Dialektiese
verkenning van die keerpunte is gevolglik onderneem. Die aanvanklike probleem
word in elke geval beskryf, gevolg deur die reaksie en die uiteindelike uitdaging wat
daaruit ontstaan het. Die vier keerpunte was die bekendstelling van die iShackkonsep,
die aanvang van die iShack-projek, die vergadering van iShackbelanghebbendes,
en die vestiging van die Enkanini-navorsingsentrum.
Aangesien sowel sigbare as onsigbare vorme van mag in hierdie onstuimige
nedersetting te sien was, en gedagtig daaraan dat die navorser oor ’n magsrol
beskik het en die navorser se kennis, aannames en vooroordele die
navorsingsproses sowel as -uitkoms kon beïnvloed, moes bykomende metodologieë
ter aanvulling van die hoof- kruisdissiplinêre navorsingsraamwerk gevind word. In dié
verband het inheemse navorsing direk betrekking gehad op mag en die belang van
vermoëbou en bemagtiging onder navorsingsdeelnemers (om hulle as’t ware in
medenavorsers te omskep). Oordenkingsnavorsing het weer ’n geleentheid gebied
vir gedissiplineerde besinning en herbesinning om enige beïnvloeding van die
proses en uitkoms te temper. Daarbenewens het elke benadering die beperkinge
van die ander ondervang, veral die geneigdheid by kruisdissiplinêre navorsing om
magsdinamiek buite rekening te laat. Sodoende is ’n metodologiese drietal en ’n
konseptuele meganisme genaamd mede-ontstaan (“co-arising”) geskep, waarmee
die resultate ondersoek kon word.
Die drie temas wat gedurende die proses uitgewys is – begrip deur die
medeproduksie van kennis, vermoëbou deur ’n bewustheid van magsdinamiek, en
betrokkenheid by die navorsingsruimte – is byeengetrek onder die gedagte van
mede-ontstaan, wat deur die metodologiese drietal onderstut is.
Die keerpunte, of bifurkasies, is deur ’n ‘oop’ koderingstelsel uit gegronde teorie
ontleed om die invloed van enige voorafbestaande toestande op die uitkoms te
beperk. Hieruit is drie dominante kategorieë afgelei – bemagtiging, identiteit en vrye
wil – synde bepalende faktore vir doeltreffende medeproduksie van kennis en die
gevolglike verskuiwing van mag vanaf die regering na burgers in ’n trapsgewyse
opgraderingsproses. Die studie sluit af met sekere aanbevelings vir verdere
navorsing.
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Surreal city escape: discovering escapism within the unaccommodating Johannesburg city fabricGhisleni, Carina 12 May 2015 (has links)
This document is submitted in partial fulfilment for
the degree: Master of Architecture (Professional)
at the University of the Witwatersrand,
Johannesburg, South Africa, in the year 2014. / This thesis explores theories of escapism and applies them to the Johannesburg precinct in the form of a socially
interactive public space. Our day to day banal realities do not satisfy our innermost desires, as a result; we choose to
disconnect from our realties. We often become passive consumers in a world dominated by production, fuelled by
retail advertising and marketing media, and in turn we frequently overlook the shaping of our own social existence and
choosing healthy forms of flight. I feel that our city does not provide opportunities for escape in the form of urban
rituals and therefore a sense of belonging is inadequately specified.
I aim to provide a positive form of escape which supports urban rituals, and thereby define a place within
Johannesburg. A public space enables social interaction and individual exploration and is therefore a temporary from
of escape. Our city is often perceived as dangerous and unaccommodating, but there is vast opportunity within the
precinct due to the many existing connections and vibrant pedestrian life. My chosen site is an existing heritage
building and the active node, Gandhi Square, currently existing divided by a sprawl of busses through which
pedestrians are forced to navigate through. Through the redesign of this space, I intend to encourage a pedestrian
dominant city, and a civic space that enhances public life and further facilitates urban renewal.
My intervention involves 3 elements; an outdoor theatre, the redesign of the Metro Bus facility and a public space to
promote a harmonious transition zone between the two. The contemporary theatre I am proposing forms space
without physical walls, as light and sound evolve to stage events. The theatre functions within the reshaping of an
existing heritage building located on site. It is a flexible space where intense sensory events can occur and carve the
avenues into a socially interactive city.
This engaging atmosphere caters for the collective as well as the everyday encounter, transforming to the needs of
Johannesburg. My intervention will define a place where the celebration of community is lacking and in turn seek to
change the perceptions of our city. Through the experience of the whole, my design facilitates chance interactions in
which mystical moments can be manifested within a public space devoted to civic escape.
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Altered States: a youth centre & safe house for at-risk adolescents in Westbury, JohannesburgKridiotis,Joanne Alexandra January 2016 (has links)
Thesis (M.Arch. (Professional))--University of the Witwatersrand, Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, 2016. / Drug abuse, particularly among younger generations, is
an issue of increasing concern in South Africa. According
to recent reports on global substance abuse, South
Africa was named as having some of the highest rates
of youth drug use in the world. This not only has dire impacts
for local communities and their youth, but has led
to increasing crime rates and unemployment in these
communities. One such community, plagued with youth
drug abuse and addiction, is Westbury, a former coloured
township in Western Johannesburg. Westbury has, in
turn, been selected as the focus area for this thesis due
to prevailing struggles with youth drug addiction, high
rates of drug-related crime and a community outcry
for a solution. This thesis aims to investigate a means
of alleviating degrees of drug use, and other risky youth
behaviours, by introducing an architectural intervention.
This intervention – defined as a Youth Centre and Safe
House – will attempt to address the search for identity
and meaning within the liminal state of adolescence,
and the often risky behaviours that arise as a result, by
providing a sense of ‘place’ and belonging for the ailing
youth.
With the main focus group being at-risk adolescents,
and in order to create an architecture that speaks of the
liminal state of adolescence, threshold and ‘the space
between’ become important design concepts. This
thesis attempts to investigate the movement between
distinct spaces, the experience of transition, and the
physical and psychological effects thereof. The resultant
design proposes an architecture of liminality, where
soft, implied thresholds and a celebration of ‘the space
between’ become the manner in which the liminal subject
can negotiate the built environment and establish a
sense of ‘place’ within it. / EM2017
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Spatial planning and transportation in Soweto: tracking densification and land-use changes around Rea Vaya phase 1A stations.Mbuyi, Tshanda January 2017 (has links)
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Development Planning, Johannesburg 2016 / The spatial transformation project in post-Apartheid South Africa aims to change the alienating urban form that resulted from planning policies based on racial segregation. Johannesburg’s municipal government aims to capitalise on its investment on the Rea Vaya Bus Rapid Transit (BRT), through the principles of Transit Oriented Development (TOD), to catalyse densification and diversification of land uses along the Rea Vaya’s corridors. This research sought to discover whether these objectives are being realised in Diepkloof and Orlando East, Soweto. In order to answer the research question, the results of a qualitative survey of people residing around these stations were analysed in conjunction with GIS data and records of Town Planning applications for properties located around BRT stations. The following findings emerged: the rate of densification has intensified but remains constrained mainly because of restricted access to finance; land-uses have remained the same but with increased activity levels. All spatial development strategies in the study area need to be aligned to the principles of TOD. This research hopes to achieve two things. Firstly, enrich the scarce literature on spatial transformation through transit investments, particularly the BRT in South African Townships. Secondly, guide spatial planning policies in similar contexts across the country / XL2018
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Reimagining the city, rewriting narratives: music, suburban youths, and inner city redevelopment in Johannesburg, circa 2015Mullins, Amanda January 2016 (has links)
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Humanities,
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg,
in fulfilment of the requirements for the
Degree of Master of Arts by Research in Music
Johannesburg 2016 / This research explores the influence that inner city redevelopment in Johannesburg has had on both
its music scenes and the identities of those participating in the music scenes, particularly young
participants from Johannesburg’s suburbs who did not interact with the city before its
redevelopment. Understanding the city’s history as well as the current lived and imagined divides
between its suburbs and inner city illuminates its fragmented nature and informs the significance of
the presence of suburban youths in today’s inner city music scenes. Personal and collective
narratives gathered from participants of these inner city music scenes provide insight into the city’s
spatial, social, and musical transitions, adding subjective voices to the city’s complex and ever-evolving
history. The use of culture-led regeneration (within cultural clusters), as a model of
redevelopment, has aided in the success of attracting new audiences to the inner city once eschewed
by suburbanites, providing grounds for new experiences and interactions within an increasingly
diverse social sphere. Due to this, the music’s diversity within these spaces is expanding too. The
role of music – and in particular, alternative music – in enticing suburban youths to the inner city
requires an understanding of why ‘alternative’ (or arguably, creative) people are often drawn to
urban spaces, and in doing so, often become main contributors to the accomplishments and successes
of redevelopment initiatives. Examining social interactions and relationships within the inner city, in
comparison to those in suburban Johannesburg, exposes a unique and highly valued manner of
communal bonding amongst participants that is often tied to involvement in similar music scenes.
The experience of the inner city, the experience of music in the inner city, and the experience of a
community of like-minded people within the inner city all combine to create new discourses about
Johannesburg, as well as impacting on the identities and experiences of those contributing to these
discourses. Transforming city. Transforming music. Transforming people. / GR2017
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Designed or made? Questioning public space as conflicting in South Africa's townships' top-down development : the case of Kliptown, SowetoGatome, Mary Clare January 2016 (has links)
The broader aim of this study is to see how these challenges can be dealt with the objective of making public spaces that is meaningful to residents in socially complex and economically challenged areas. The study illuminates the challenges in designing a typology that is as open and volatile as public open space, and in particular the square, that is, conceived space. It also seeks to understand what form public open space and social spaces take on, and how they are used in ways that are peculiar to the township context. the research seeks to establish design concepts to develop WSSD through involvement of the community and being more responsive to its context, can become a meaningful space.
[Abbreviated Abstract. Open document to view full version]
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The city as living room: the criticalities of urban design in an age of empowerment in sub Saharan Africa.Kelly, Tracey Leigh January 1992 (has links)
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of
Architecture,
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg,
in partial fulfillment of the degree
of Master of Urban Design / Andrew Chakane 2018
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An examination of the use of urban design instruments in promoting spatial equity in a non-motorized priority route: the case of an alternative Sandton-Alexandra NMT routeGhoor, Raeesa January 2016 (has links)
This document is submitted in partial fulfilment for the degree
Master of Urban Design at the University of the Witwatersrand, 2016 / The planned non-motorized transport (NMT) route in Sandton is part of the Corridors of Freedom project which seeks to change
spatial patterns in Johannesburg. This research seeks to understand this route and how an alternative route would respond to
the context and present an opportunity to create spatially equitable spaces between Alexandra and Sandton on the NMT priority
space. This will be done using the mechanism of urban design tools. Urban design tools themselves face various challenges
as the underlying institutional context is often not conducive to creating some of the urban design objectives of spatial equity
and the prioritization of NMT. This research, through a design strategy, proposes an alternative mechanism of coding. / MT2017
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Fair ground : festival phenomena : an urban park upgrade and transformation of the Southwest Bank of Wemmer Pan in Johannesburg SouthSerrao, Gabriella 07 October 2014 (has links)
“wherever the human spirit is free, people celebrate. All
cultures commemorate what makes them distinctive and
worthy in their own eyes. Periodically, a common humanity
in us all sets aside the work and worry of everyday life
and blossoms into festivity, sometimes even in the face of
cultural domination and economic deprivation.”
(Rinzler & Seitel, 1982, p.7)
Various cultures exist and the display of specifi c group’s values, traditions and crafts in
the form of an event becomes the ‘exciting experience’ longed for by the inhabitants
of the city who crave an outlet from the everyday pressures and routine of life, desire a
sense of belonging, want to express their suppressed desires or share an interest in the
ideals or products being portrayed. These events require space, of various nature and
size, which facilitate its range of needs from culturally relevant locations to necessary
features. Globally, the urban setting has proved to be ideal when computing these space
requirements and municipalities are going out of their way to create or maintain spaces
to host these events for the wealth of social, spatial and economic stimulation they hold.
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Understanding the increase in demand for accommodation in the Johannesburg Northern suburbs from the black middle class / Understanding the increase in demand for high density accommodation in the Johannesburg Northern suburbs from the black middle classMngaza, Banele Mompati January 2016 (has links)
Thesis is submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Science in Development Planning to the Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2016 / The current increase in demand for accommodation in the Johannesburg northern suburbs is
linked to the political and demographic changes that took place within South Africa post
1994. During this time there was a flight of affluent white South Africans away from what
was then the centre of the country’s economy, the Johannesburg Central Business District
(Garner, 2011). There has been an increase in the size of South Africa’s black middle class
post 1994, due to the removal of racist legislation impeding the economic advancements of
black South Africans, as well as due to the progressive affirmative action policies designed to
fast track the advancement of black South Africans (Southall, 2016). Consequently, there has
been a steady increase of black middle class people moving into the northern suburbs of
Johannesburg. The study was conducted in the Sandton suburbs of Johannesburg, Gauteng. It
sought to understand what factors have led to the increase in demand for accommodation in
these suburbs from the black middle class. 27 interviews were conducted with participants in
the case study areas of Illovo, Sandton Central Business District, Sandown, Bryanston and
Sandhurst. The researcher made use of direct observations during the semi-structured
interviews. The results showed that research in this area was imperative as it helped to
explain the buying and renting patterns of the black middle class. This is important for
property developers and the government because the black middle class is a fast growing
economic subgroup within the country. This can impact on policy and property development
in the country.
The study found that the black middle class are moving to the northern suburbs for pragmatic
reasons and that proximity to their places of work, proximity to amenities and security are the
most important factors causing them to move. / MT2017
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