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Sir William Milton : a leading figure in public school games, colonial politics and imperial expansion 1877-1914Winch, Jonathan R. T. 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (PhD)--Stellenbosch University, 2013. / This investigation is aimed at providing a better understanding of William Milton’s influence
on society in southern Africa over a period of more than thirty years. In the absence of any
previous detailed work, it will serve to demonstrate Milton’s importance in restructuring the
administration, formulating policy and imposing social barriers in early Rhodesia – factors
that will contribute to the research undertaken by revisionist writers. It will also go some way
towards answering Lord Blake’s call to discover exactly what the Administrator did and how
he did it.
Milton’s experiences at the Cape are seen as being essential to an understanding of the
administration he established in Rhodesia. Through examining this link – referred to by
historians but not as yet explored in detail – new knowledge will be provided on Rhodesia’s
government in the pre-First World War period. The Cape years will offer insight into
Milton’s working relationship with Rhodes and his involvement in the latter’s vision of the
region’s social form and future. They will also shed light on Milton’s attitude towards people
of colour.
Cricket and rugby are key themes running through Milton’s life. The study will
illuminate much about the creation of South African sport at a time when the public school
games ethic was important in the nature of empire. Milton made an enormous but
controversial contribution to the playing of the games, club culture, facilities, administration,
international competition and who was eligible to represent South Africa.
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Management and development of cricket in South Africa with special reference to Natal.Naidoo, Loganadhan Dalyiah January 1983 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the management and development of cricket in South Africa with particular reference to Natal. The objectives of this evaluation included Highlighting the period of cricket prior to unification; Describing the unification process and the conditions necessary for unity; and Evaluation of the development programmes at national and provincial levels. The extensive area of investigation and the vastness of the area of study, restricts this research to specific aspects that are pertinent to the topic. The objectives of the study therefore focus on the following : To provide a theoretical foundation and analysis of administration, organisation and structure, and development, in order to establish whether the current situation did in fact meet with the objectives of the unification process; To investigate the effects of the apartheid policy on sport in South Africa; and To provide a critical appraisal of existing development programmes in order to enhance the knowledge and literature-base of cricket administration in South Africa. Within the framework of this research, and the theoretical foundations of cricket administration and development, the effects of the government's policy of "Apartheid", the emergence of the non-racial sports struggle, the unification process, and the structure of cricket with particular emphasis on the development programmes both at national and provincial levels, are discussed. The conclusion, which draws inferences from each chapter, provides certain recommendations pertaining to the following: The establishment of a National Sports Coordinating Body; The development of a National Development Policy; The establishment of a National Development Fund; The Development of Talented Players; The Development of Officials; The Development of Clubs; The Provision of Facilities; The establishment of School Cricket Unification; and Control and Accountability. It is hoped that the recommendations and suggestions made address some aspects of the various issues raised about the unification process in cricket in South Africa. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Durban-Westville, Durban, 1993.
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The ties that bind : the relationship between politics and cricket in South Africa (1989-1992)Chapman, Aurelia 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA (History))--University of Stellenbosch, 2005. / South Africa has just celebrated its ten years of democracy. The country’s economic, political and sporting situation is stable. Some would debate this, but for the most part, ten years of democracy has been beneficial for most South Africans. Before 1994, South Africa had endured more than forty years of apartheid. It was a system that governed nearly every facet of life for Black South Africans. Apartheid dictated where one was allowed to live, where one was allowed to go to school and even whom one was allowed to marry. It also used sport to enforce and strengthen the ruling regime.
Sport and politics have long been inextricably entangled in South Africa. The history of South African cricket walks alongside that of South Africa’s political history. Sport, and in this case, cricket, reflected South Africa’s political and social processes. South African cricket embraces an ethos that is symbolic of a wider belief system and as such has distinctive political connotations in the region. Sport in South Africa is influenced by forces beyond the sports field, but politics too can be influenced by the social and economic force of sport.
This thesis aims to show how cricket not only reflected, but was also able to exert pressure on South Africa’s political situation by focussing on the years 1989-1992. A historical analysis of these years will illustrate how cricket assisted the transformation process in South Africa.
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