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Community resilience and agency within the rural assemblageLendvay, Márton January 2018 (has links)
Rural change and the ability of farming communities to respond and withstand change is a topic of ongoing concern in the current research agenda. ‘Rural community resilience’ is a concept that has become a core theme of academic, policy and lay discourses discussing dynamics of rural change, widely associated with community studies and allied to notions of social capital. This work reviews approaches to community relations developed within community studies and social capital scholarship, and suggests that the relational agency of the network ties might also be explored through the application of an assemblage approach. However, and unlike many previous approaches to community resilience that use the concept in a normative way and which understandably highlight agency of social relations, this research has been constructed in such a way that network ties established through day-to-day community practices are characterized both vital and far from passive. Developing this current line of thinking in rural studies, this project argues that more-than-social agency evoked by relations between human and non-human components of the rural assemblage is an important factor affecting community resilience. The empirical research feeds from two case studies and gathers evidence from two distinctive agricultural communities of Hungary and Wales, whilst also recognizing similarities in the context of globalization. It argues that rural community resilience lies in relations between the humans, the land and the agricultural commodities.
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Using the pollution-index method to assess water quality in the upper Olifants River Catchment, Mpumalanga Province.Oberholster, Petrus Fredrik January 2017 (has links)
Magister Scientiae - MSc (Environ & Water Science) / The upper Olifants River catchment, situated in Mpumalanga Province, South Africa, is one of
the main sources of water for this region. This region face challenges to guarantee future water
security due to intensive land use activities e.g. mining, energy production, and agriculture
activities. South Africa is the sixth largest producers of coal in the world and the Witbank
(eMalahleni) coal fields, situated in the catchment, represents the largest conterminous area of
active coal mining in South Africa. The second largest irrigation scheme (Loskop dam
Irrigation Board) is also found below the Loskop Dam in the upper Olifants River catchment.
The irrigation scheme of + - 480 km of irrigation channels provides water for a R1 Billion export
industry of citric fruits to the European Union. Furthermore, the Olifants River in Mpumalanga
is also a trans-boundary river that initially flows northwards before curving in an easterly
direction through the Kruger National Park and into Mozambique where it joins the Limpopo
River before discharging into the Indian Ocean. Although the Olifants River is one of the main
river systems in South Africa, it has been described as one of the most polluted rivers in
southern Africa, with Loskop Dam acting as a repository for pollutants from the upper
catchment of the Olifants River system. Because Loskop Dam is of strategic important for the
whole region the aim of the study was to show the implications of poor water quality on the
local communities down stream of Loskop Dam that depend on water usage for their livelihood.
(1) Developing a modified pollution index for the Loskop Dam, Mpumalanga Province using
bioindicator algae species in relationship with water column physico-chemical parameters and
national water guidelines as indication of pollution. (2) Analysing the threat of cyanobacteria,
microsystin contaminations to crops irrigating by water from the Loskop Dam irrigation canals.
(3) Discussing the social economic implication of water pollution on the Loskop Irrigation
scheme and its stakeholders.
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The Perceptions of a Farming Community in the Limpopo Province on HIV and AidsKlaas, Ntombifikile January 2014 (has links)
South Africa has been seriously affected by the HIV and Aids pandemic, with the agricultural sector being no exception (Zvomuya, 2005: 33). The Department of Health (DOH, 2007: 4) identified that inadequate health care capacity particularly in rural areas is one of the factors contributing to the disproportionate provision of good quality care and targeted development. Therefore, in South Africa, the farming community is one of the sectors with disproportionate provision of health care especially in HIV management. Among the farming communities in general, awareness, treatment and prevention has been utilized as components of a strategy intended to empower the farm employers and employees (Zvomuya, 2005: 33).
The objective of this study was to explore and describe the perceptions of the farming community on HIV and Aids. A qualitative, exploratory and descriptive research design was followed to explore and describe the perceptions of the farming community on HIV and Aids in the Limpopo Province. The study the population consisted of the farm owner, farm managers and farm employees both males and females above the age of eighteen (18) years in the Limpopo Province. A purposive sampling method and a convenient sampling were used in this study. The researcher used in- depth one on one interviews to collect data so as to explore and describe the perceptions of the farming community on HIV and Aids and field notes were taken. Data was analysed according to Tesch’s analysis method. Categories, sub categories and themes were identified and verified by means of literature control. The following seven categories were identified and described: Emotions linked to HIV and Aids, individual characteristics and experiences, behavior cognition and affect, human resource issues, lack of recreational facilities, health care needs, and support as a health promotion strategy.
The researcher recommended that educational programmes such as effective risk reducing programmes and awareness, as well as support structures, should be made available to all farming community. Due to the scarcity of information on HIV and Aids in the farming community, a variety of methods like audio visual media in a form of radio and television and printed media in a form of posters, charts, pamphlets and booklets can be used to disseminate the knowledge. However, this knowledge is not limited to hosting educational sessions, training workshops, community meetings, focus groups, and wellness programs by peer educators and community leaders. Based on the above recommendations, further research in other areas to explore the perceptions of the farming community on HIV and Aids in depth is relevant.
In conclusion, regular training on HIV and Aids is therefore crucial given that the findings of this study showed that, despite the HIV awareness campaigns going on in South Africa, some segments of the population do not get the message, specifically the farming community. The universal access of health care services which most of us take for granted are not accessible in the farming community due to their long working hours and the fact that the mobile clinics which use to provide basic PHC (primary health care) services were no longer coming. / Dissertation (MCur)--University of Pretoria, 2013. / gm2014 / Nursing Science / unrestricted
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The Failure of Promoting a Sense of Sisterhood in the Face of Patriarchy : A Feminist Reading of Jane Smiley's A Thousand AcresBolmefalk, Jennifer January 2012 (has links)
This study is a feminist reading of Jane Smiley's novel A Thousand Acres. It focuses on the Cook sisters and their lives in a farming community at a time that coincides with the end of second wave feminism. In particular, it pays attention to the absence of sisterhood among the three sisters in the novel. It analyses first each individual sister including their different approaches to sisterhood and then their failure to unite in the type of strategic, politically motivated notion of sisterhood that was promoted by second wave feminism. By looking at different reasons why the sisters cannot establish a strong sisterhood my essay aims to demonstrate that A Thousand Acres not only criticises patriarchal society in its portrayal of the Cook family but also, and more importantly, that it criticises second wave feminism by pointing out its failure in terms of promoting a sense of sisterhood.
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Designing a food based strategy for the introduction of an unfamiliar food crop as a community based approachRajput, Innike January 2012 (has links)
Household food security has been described with a three-factor definition: 1) the availability
of food, 2) the access thereto, and lastly 3) the food utilization patterns and practices. In
previous research, both the availability and access to food were studied in a farming
community in the Free State Province to understand how these factors contribute to
household food security. However food utilization was not investigated at the time. Food
consumption patterns of households deserve attention, particularly in relation to food
gardens and nutrition, including the cultivation cycle, dietary norms and practices, and
methods of food preparation and preservation. By studying utilization patterns of foods, the
context of food insecurity and the resultant malnutrition can be better understood.
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether the food utilization strategies of a
known food crop (spinach) can be used to establish efficient utilization of a new, unfamiliar
crop (orange-fleshed sweet potato) in a farm worker community.
Three focus group interviews were conducted with a total of 21 participants to determine
current food utilization patterns of spinach and orange-fleshed sweet potato (OFSP). The
women were asked to describe how they currently utilize these crops in the same focus
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group discussion (although the focus was on the known crop (spinach)) to understand what
actions they take during the process of utilization, from access to disposal. They were asked
to describe which tools and methods they apply, and who participates in all these various
activities. Subsequently, the respondents were asked to perform all these steps while being
observed to record current practices. Data from the focus group interviews and the
observations were transcribed and categorized under themes. It was found that in addition to
a lack of dietary diversity and subsequent malnutrition found discovered in another study of
this community, that they are also not optimally utilizing their food. This is as a direct result of
lack of access to a variety of food due to monetary constraints, lack of nearby shops, a lack
of cultivation and production education about crops that can be home-produced, and a lack
of knowledge about nutrition and the importance of a varied diet. A food-based approach to
improve the lack of knowledge of home-produced crops and nutrition was, consequently, the
focus of this utilization strategy. This information was used to design a food-based strategy
to improve the utilization of an unfamiliar crop (OFSP), in areas where the food crop was not
being utilized optimally. Although the strategy was developed based on observations and
lessons from one specific community, the principal findings were used to develop a strategy
that is generic to the implementation of an unfamiliar food crop, and can then be refined for a
specific community before implementation. A complete training manual was developed to
complement the food-based strategy. The researcher then tested the strategy with
agricultural extension officers who are active in communities where food insecurity and
malnutrition exist during a training programme hosted by the Agricultural Research Council -
Roodeplaat. The agricultural extension officers provided input on the strategy and identified
areas for improvement. These recommendations were adapted in a manual to ensure that
the developed strategy could be broadly implemented in other communities.
The overall conclusion of the study is that it is necessary to investigate and understand all
elements of the food utilization system to truly understand the reasons for observed
behaviour, habits and practices. Planning and developing a nutrition education programme
requires systematic analysis of nutrition and health-related problems in a given community.
It is evident that each step of the utilization cycle is equally critical and should enjoy
comparable attention to facilitate delivery of nutrient-rich foodstuffs to the end user. / Dissertation (MConsumer Science)--University of Pretoria, 2012. / gm2014 / Consumer Science / unrestricted
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Landskapskildering as ver-beeld-ing van die liminale in geselekteerde werke van Pauline Gutter / Willem Pretorius VenterVenter, Willem Pretorius January 2014 (has links)
This dissertation presents an investigation into three works by the South African artist Pauline Gutter (b. 1980) that were originally shown in her exhibition Opslag (2008) [this title is almost impossible to translate; it can refer to the sound of a gun, or it can mean to butcher something; it has an association of suddenness]. The works that were selected for scrutiny in this dissertation are Uit die blou van onse hemel [translated as From our blue skies; or Ringing out of our blue heaven – the first words of the erstwhile South African anthem] (2004), Into the landscape I (2007), and Landskap naby Zastron [Landscape close by Zastron] (2006). The choice of works was based on the particular mode of and imaginative re-presentation of the landscape that can be discerned in each of these works – different, yet conceptually quite similar. I argue that Gutter‟s landscape works in the exhibition Opslag (as representative of the thematic concerns of the show as a whole) are indicative of an imaginative re-presentation of a liminal experience (which is informed to a large degree by the artist‟s acute awareness of the threat posed by cruel and rampant attacks on the farming community). This liminal experience, as embodied in the artworks, is in its turn a reflection of the liminal existence as lived and interpreted by the artist‟s perception of her environment and community – speficially, the Boer farming community of South Africa, and even more specificially, in the Free State Province. Those aspects of a liminal experience that can be gleaned from a reading of the selected works Uit die blou van onse hemel, Into the landscape, and Landskap naby Zastron, are powerlessness, instability, the transitory shift of status, disorientation, isolation, marginalisation, and uncertainty. I argue, furthermore, that the imaginative re-presentation of the liminal experience is achieved by means of certain strategies and approaches towards landscape painting that are associated with the sublime. Where the sublime, in the context of the re-presentation of the landscape is often associated with a sense of being overwhelmed, even with awe, I demonstrate that Gutter achieves what Coetzee (1988:49) refers to as a singularly distinct understanding of the sublime with reference to the unique character of the South African landscape. In this sense, specific themes associated with the sublime (portraying things like problems, the sudden and the unexpected, darkness [that connotes uncertainty], danger, fearsomeness, and emptiness [that relates to isolation]) can be related with elements of the liminal. By identifying the themes of sublime representation, the reading of the works demonstrate firstly Gutter‟s unique and distinct application of sublime landscape painting. Secondly, it emerges that the portrayal of the liminal is achieved by means of these strategies towards landscape painting, and thirdly, that the imaginative re-presentation of the liminal is suggestive of a particular dimension of the existence of the contemporary Boer/farming community. Gutter‟s reflection of and on the landscape demonstrate a particularly poignant projection of a theme onto the landscape, and seems to suggest that while the liminal experience is potentially a place of growth and renewal, it can also induce a sense of paralysis as a result of the overwhelming uncertainty experienced by the particular community. / MA (History of Art), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014
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Landskapskildering as ver-beeld-ing van die liminale in geselekteerde werke van Pauline Gutter / Willem Pretorius VenterVenter, Willem Pretorius January 2014 (has links)
This dissertation presents an investigation into three works by the South African artist Pauline Gutter (b. 1980) that were originally shown in her exhibition Opslag (2008) [this title is almost impossible to translate; it can refer to the sound of a gun, or it can mean to butcher something; it has an association of suddenness]. The works that were selected for scrutiny in this dissertation are Uit die blou van onse hemel [translated as From our blue skies; or Ringing out of our blue heaven – the first words of the erstwhile South African anthem] (2004), Into the landscape I (2007), and Landskap naby Zastron [Landscape close by Zastron] (2006). The choice of works was based on the particular mode of and imaginative re-presentation of the landscape that can be discerned in each of these works – different, yet conceptually quite similar. I argue that Gutter‟s landscape works in the exhibition Opslag (as representative of the thematic concerns of the show as a whole) are indicative of an imaginative re-presentation of a liminal experience (which is informed to a large degree by the artist‟s acute awareness of the threat posed by cruel and rampant attacks on the farming community). This liminal experience, as embodied in the artworks, is in its turn a reflection of the liminal existence as lived and interpreted by the artist‟s perception of her environment and community – speficially, the Boer farming community of South Africa, and even more specificially, in the Free State Province. Those aspects of a liminal experience that can be gleaned from a reading of the selected works Uit die blou van onse hemel, Into the landscape, and Landskap naby Zastron, are powerlessness, instability, the transitory shift of status, disorientation, isolation, marginalisation, and uncertainty. I argue, furthermore, that the imaginative re-presentation of the liminal experience is achieved by means of certain strategies and approaches towards landscape painting that are associated with the sublime. Where the sublime, in the context of the re-presentation of the landscape is often associated with a sense of being overwhelmed, even with awe, I demonstrate that Gutter achieves what Coetzee (1988:49) refers to as a singularly distinct understanding of the sublime with reference to the unique character of the South African landscape. In this sense, specific themes associated with the sublime (portraying things like problems, the sudden and the unexpected, darkness [that connotes uncertainty], danger, fearsomeness, and emptiness [that relates to isolation]) can be related with elements of the liminal. By identifying the themes of sublime representation, the reading of the works demonstrate firstly Gutter‟s unique and distinct application of sublime landscape painting. Secondly, it emerges that the portrayal of the liminal is achieved by means of these strategies towards landscape painting, and thirdly, that the imaginative re-presentation of the liminal is suggestive of a particular dimension of the existence of the contemporary Boer/farming community. Gutter‟s reflection of and on the landscape demonstrate a particularly poignant projection of a theme onto the landscape, and seems to suggest that while the liminal experience is potentially a place of growth and renewal, it can also induce a sense of paralysis as a result of the overwhelming uncertainty experienced by the particular community. / MA (History of Art), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014
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Narratiewe van die self in die Boeregemeenskap tydens die Suid-Afrikaanse grondhervormingsproses na 1994 (Afrikaans)Du Toit, Petronella Cornelia 15 December 2008 (has links)
AFRIKAANS : Hierdie studie behels drie narratiewe wat gekonstrueer is uit onderhoude met boere wat die boerdery na 1994 verlaat het. Die fokus van die studie is om die private en openbare diskoerse wat ’n konteks skep vir boere om die boerdery te verlaat, te identifiseer. Daar is tans ’n eksodus van boere uit die landbou. Hierdie tendens skep ’n konteks vir destabilisasie van die platteland en beïnvloed al die betrokke rolspelers. Tog is min of geen navorsing in die sielkunde oor die belewenisse van hierdie groep mense onderneem nie. Die navorsing is uitgevoer vanuit ’n sosiale konstruksionistiese benadering wat binne die postmoderne diskoers geanker is. ’n Diskoersanalise is uitgevoer op die teks van drie navorsingsdeelnemers wat nog tot onlangs toe geboer het, maar intussen hul narratiewe moes rekonstrueer. Die unieke betekenis wat deur die navorsingsteks gekonstrueer word, is dat die verduidelikende lokus vir menslike gedrag vanaf die klassieke fokus op persoonlike belewenisse en verstandelike prosesse wat binne individue gesetel is, na ’n fokus op prosesse en strukture van menslike interaksie verskuif. Die navorsingsteks beskik dus oor die vermoë om ’n bewustheid by sielkundiges en verwante beroepe te konstrueer om vanuit ’n nuwe perspektief na die sielkundige diskoers te kyk. In hoofstuk een deel ek my eie boerderynarratief met die leser en stel die navorsingsvraag bekend. In hoofstuk twee word die konteks waarbinne boerdery in Suid-Afrika gesitueer is, aan die hand van ’n literatuurstudie uiteengesit. Dit word in hoofstuk drie opgevolg met ’n verduideliking van die paradigmatiese vertrekpunt, naamlik sosiale konstruksionisme. Diskoersanalise wat as ’n metode gebruik word om die teks te eksploreer word ook bespreek. Met hierdie agtergrond in gedagte word daar in hoofstuk vier oorgegaan na die fokus van die navorsing, naamlik die eksplorasie van teks. ’n Diskoersanalise is op die teks van drie navorsingsdeelnemers gedoen. Diskoerse wat in die proses geïdentifiseer is, sluit die volgende in: gesin-van-oorsprong-diskoers; beroepsdiskoers; politieke diskoers; misdaad-diskoers; ekonomiese diskoers; stoettelersdiskoers; middelman-diskoers; patriargale diskoers; ouderdomsdiskoers; beleggingsdiskoers; biomediese diskoers; opvoedingsdiskoers; die koöperasie as ’n instelling; sowel as diskoerse wat in die pers gevoer word. Hierdie diskoerse vorm saam die konteks waarbinne boere besluite oor hul toekoms neem. Die bevindings word nie as die waarheid hanteer nie, maar as die waarheid wat deur taal en magsverhoudings in stand gehou word. U word genooi om verder te lees en die sentrale posisie wat taal beklee in die skepping van die realiteit van die mens se bestaan, en in die konstruering van die navorsingsnarratief, vir uself te ontdek. ENGLISH : This study comprises three narratives that were constructed from interviews conducted with farmers who had given up farming after 1994. The focus of the study is to identify the private and public discourses that create a context for farmers to give up farming. Currently, an exodus of farmers is taking place from agriculture. This trend creates a context for the destabilisation of rural areas and affects all parties involved. However, in the field of psychology little research, if any, has been conducted into the experiences of this group of people. The research was conducted from a social constructionism approach anchored in the postmodern discourse. A discourse analysis was done of the text of three research participants who had been farming until recently, but who since had to reconstruct their narratives. The unique meaning constructed by the research text is that the explanatory locus of human behaviour has moved away from the classic focus on personal experiences and mental processes residing in individuals, to a focus on processes and structures of human interaction. The research text has the potential of constructing awareness among psychologists and related professions to view the psychological discourse from a new perspective. In chapter one I share my own farming narrative with the reader and introduce the research question. Chapter two comprises the context in which the farming industry is situated in South Africa based on a study of relevant literature. That is followed by an explanation of the paradigmatic point of departure known as social constructionism in chapter three. Discourse analysis is also discussed as a method used to explore the text. Bearing this in mind, chapter four moves on to the research focus, that is the exploration of text. A discourse analysis was done of the text of three research participants. Discourses identified in the process include the following: family-of-origin discourse; career discourse; political discourse; crime discourse; economic discourse; stud-farming discourse; middleman discourse; patriarchal discourse; age discourse; investment discourse; bio-medical discourse; educational discourse; the cooperative as an institution; as well as discourses conducted in the press. Together these discourses form the context within which farmers make decisions about their future. The findings are not dealt with as the truth, but as the truth maintained in language and relationships of power. You are invited to read on and to discover for yourself the central position which language holds in creating the reality of man’s existence and in constructing the research narrative. / Dissertation (MA)--University of Pretoria, 2008. / Psychology / unrestricted
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Adolescents' experiences and coping strategies with parental substance addiction within a rural farming community : a social work perspectiveMarinus, Denise Ronelle 02 1900 (has links)
The abuse of and addiction to substances by parents of adolescents, especially in rural areas, is recognised as a major national and international social concern. South African legislation and policy documents provide a framework that emphasises the need to protect and care for children of addicted parents. Literature and recent studies, however, do not focus on how adolescents in rural communities experience dealing with an addicted parent. For this reason, this research study explored and described the experiences and coping strategies of adolescents in rural communities regarding the parents’ addiction. The study was based on a qualitative research approach and made use of the contextual, explorative, descriptive and narrative research designs. The findings illustrate the descriptions of participants’ perceptions and experiences related to living in a farming community, the nature of parental substance addiction, how it affects them, how they deal with it and their perceptions of support needed by them. Recommendations in terms of the micro, mezzo and macro levels serves as guidelines for social workers to assist adolescents of substance-addicted parents with the needed support, protection and care. / Social Work / M.A. (Social Work)
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The role of culture and gender in the spread of HIV and AIDS and strategies for the reduction of HIV and AIDS among farm workers in South AfricaKlaas, Ntombifikile Elizabeth 02 1900 (has links)
Worldwide, the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) pandemic has proven to be a health care challenge from the perspective of testing and treatment, including how to create sustainable positive prevention, prevention after becoming HIV positive, that is culturally relevant and gender sensitive. South Africa has been severely affected by the HIV and AIDS epidemic and the agricultural sector is no exception. This statement is supported by the findings of the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) study.
According to an IOM study, the HIV prevalence rate among farm workers in the country is about 40%, the highest ever recorded in Southern Africa. A study conducted in Limpopo and Mpumalanga farms revealed that the prevalence of the twenty-three farms was 39, 5% which is twice the UNAIDS (Joint United Nations Programme on HIV and AIDS) national prevalence percentage of 18, 1% in South Africa. The researchers of this study could not pin-point a single factor causing this high rate of HIV infection on these farms. A multitude of factors, such as multiple and concurrent partnerships, transactional sex, irregular condom use, presence of sexually transmitted infections and sexual violence. The research also showed that almost half of the women working on farms around these provinces are HIV positive, compared to only a third of the male workforce.
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore and describe the role of culture and gender in the spread of HIV and AIDS among farm workers in South Africa; with the view of developing culture and gender sensitive HIV and AIDS prevention strategies. descriptive and explorative qualitative approach was adopted. In depth individual semi-structured interviews were used to explore and describe the role of culture and gender in the spread of HIV and AIDS among farm workers. Purposive and convenient sampling methods were used to select participants who met the inclusion criteria in the Tshitwani and Barota farming community in the Vhembe District, Limpopo Province, South Africa.
Religious and cultural beliefs were believed to be fuelling the spread of HIV among farm workers. Multiple sexual partners and inconsistent condom usage was common among participants. It was evident that stigma and social isolation leading to non- disclosure had adverse repercussions as some participants stated that they would spread HIV intentionally. Powerlessness and lack of decision-making by female farm workers was common as they were dependent on their male partners to make decisions regarding sexual matters in their relationship.
Conclusion: More HIV prevention programmes tailored to dispel fears about stigma and correct myths about HIV-transmission should reach ordinary men and women in order to curb the spread of HIV among farm workers. The researcher believes that the strategies that emanate from this study would be applied in other settings other than the farming community. / Health Studies / D. Litt. et Phil. (Health Studies)
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