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The legal status of part-time employeesBrand, Christopher John 13 August 2015 (has links)
LL.M. / Please refer to full text to view abstract
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An assessment of the impact of the management of the social security system on access to services in Limpopo ProvinceMunshedzi, Thivhakoni Kingsley January 2016 (has links)
Thesis (M. Dev.) -- University of Limpopo, 2016 / In attacking poverty in post-apartheid South Africa, the country’s new government
adopted a multiple approach focusing on building institutions and organisations on a
macro regional and local level, levels to facilitate growth, reconstruction and social
upliftment. In its effort to alleviate poverty and inequality, the Government of South
Africa introduced a social security system. In an endeavour to address the deficiencies
surrounding this system, the government has established a number of mechanisms. In
order to distribute these grants to the right people in the right place, the government
formed the South African Social Security Agency (SASSA). The research problem was,
therefore, to find out how the management and administration of social security by
SASSA is enhancing or retarding access to the services for which the agency was
established to render.
The aim of this study was to assess how the management and administration of the
social security system impact on the accessibility of social services by those who
require them. In order to achieve the aim of this study, the following objectives were
addressed: how social security is managed in the Limpopo Province; to assess the
impact of the management of the system on access to services; to identify possible
strategies that could enhance access to social security services; and to provide
recommendations based on the literature and research findings.
The findings of this study was that the administration system of the South African grant
system has been somewhat cumbersome for both the applicant and the administrator
because the forms used for most grants are detailed and often quite technical.
Furthermore, it was established that were service delivery challenges of severe staff
shortages at critical operational levels where grant applications are processed and
infrastructural challenges such as insufficient office space (too many staff members in a
specific office) and insufficient or no connectivity at certain service delivery points.
These are all organisational challenges that SASSA is facing.
This research recommend that the Limpopo regional office must not only be responsible
for giving information about newly enrolled recipients to the SASSA national office but
the regional office should be able to complete the whole process within its offices
without passing it on to the national office The research also recommends that a
Monitoring and Evaluation unit must be established in regional offices. This unit will
assist the management and administration of social grants in particular with improving
services. This unit will visit different SASSA offices in the local municipalities on a
regular basis in order to evaluate the performance of those particular offices. This will
help to monitor the service delivery to the beneficiaries. Lastly, SASSA should do more
research and development in consultation academic institutions or by structure within
SASSA offices
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A legal analysis of the application of corporate governance principles in the aviation sectorTshikovhi, Unarine Sandra January 2017 (has links)
Thesis (LLM.) -- University of Limpopo, 2017. / The introduction of the King reports on corporate governance in South Africa introduced good corporate governance principles to be applied by companies and entities; public, private and state-owned companies. The lxxvpurpose of King I, II, III and draft King IV on corporate governance is to provide and promote a good transitional process in companies in order for them to showcase the principles of accountability, sustainability and transparency; which are the fundamental aspects of which every company has to adhere to in order for it to be a good corporate citizen of the state. Ethics as mostly dealt with in draft King IV being the founding principles of good corporate governance. The trends across the domains show a lack of good corporate governance between the shareholder, board and management with displacement of the controlling and managing abilities between the parties. Despite continued upheavals, repeated disappointment and financial shortcomings the government continues to bail state-owned airlines from a state of insolvency. This study aims to analyze the application of the corporate governance principles in the aviation sector looking closely into state-owned airlines.
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A legal analysis of the application of corporate governance principles in the local government sphere as a measure to improve service deliveryMokgopo, Tshehledi Isaac January 2017 (has links)
Thesis (M. Dev.) -- University of LImpopo, 2017. / The new democratic government of South Africa came into power in 1994 and it inherited a dysfunctional municipalities. In fact it inherited a country with high levels of poverty, growing levels of inequality and also social dysfunctionality. The local government sphere was established in South Africa with the main aim of addressing inequality, segregation, inequity, discrimination in the provision of municipal services and eradication poverty within communities. However, ever since the establishment of local government sphere in South Africa, the sphere of local government is fraught with many challenges which make it impossible for municipalities to render proper municipal services to the members of the public. This is evident from the protests which were observed in the country ever since the year 2008 were communities demanded better services from their municipalities. This mini-dissertation therefore discusses the application of the principles of corporate governance in delivering and improving municipal service in South Africa. It further discusses the legislative framework and the institution of government which are responsible for the effective implementation of corporate governance in the local government sphere. Pursuant to that it also explains the concept of Corporate Governance within the local government. Furthermore, it discusses the parameters of the challenges that are faced by the municipalities which are ranging from fraud, nepotism, corruption and poor financial management which result in poor service delivery.
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Legal framework regulating the National Health Insurance Scheme :prospects and challengesNgqolowa, Dundu Davey January 2017 (has links)
Thesis (M.Dev.) -- University of Limpopo, 2017. / This mini-dissertation examines the policies regulating the National Health Insurance Scheme. It explores the reforms on the health care system in South Africa. In addressing this issue, the mini-dissertation investigates the constitutional obligation of the South African government regarding the provision of health care services. It also focuses on the two primary issues relating to health care services. Firstly, South Africa has allocated significant budget to fix the ailing health care system. Secondly, South Africa commands huge health care resources compared with many other middle-income countries, however the bulk of these resources are in the private sector and serve a minority of the population. It further looks at the lessons that South Africa could learn from the successes of the National Health Insurance Scheme implementation in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries as it proceeds with the implementation of the National Health Insurance.
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Cannabis confusion : criminalization and decriminalization revisitedSmith, Alex January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Some economic and legal aspects of real estate with particular reference to South AfricaPenny, Peter January 1969 (has links)
Includes bibliographical references. / The essential purpose of this study is to assess the effect of action by the State, both legislative and judicial, on the value and utilisation of land and buildings; it does not set out to provide a general statement on the principles of land economics. The boundaries of the subject matter have been established by problems arising in the professional practice of a property economist in South Africa, rather than on any a priori basis. The title "Economic and Legal Aspects of Real Estate with particular reference to South Africa", may imply a broader examination than has in fact been made. At the outset therefore it must be stated that there are other matters which might well have been embraced by such a title, but which were not objectives of this study - for example the policy of successive governments towards the utilisation of land by Non-Whites.
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The feasibility of trust as a generation skipping device based on the amendments to the Income Tax Act and the Davis tax committee's report into wealth taxation as well as the potential effect these may have on trustsCrafford, Carel Pieter January 2019 (has links)
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Commerce, Law and Management, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Commerce (specialising in Taxation) / Trusts are not as desirable as they once were, and every year they seem to become less so. The reason for their increasing undesirability is the heavy tax burden they carry. / NG (2020)
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Law and community in a slave society : Stellenbosch district, c.1760-1820Dooling, Wayne January 1991 (has links)
Bibliography: pages 164-177. / This dissertation is primarily concerned with the functioning of the law in the Cape Colony in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries as it pertained to slaves and masters (and to a lesser extent Khoi servants). It examines the operation of the law in one particular rural district, namely, Stellenbosch in the years c.1760-1820. The chief primary sources include criminal -- and on a smaller scale civil -- records of the local and central courts of the colony. Travellers' accounts have also been utilised. The study of one particular rural district reveals the extent to which the law was intricately woven into the fabric of the settler 'community'. Despite differentials of wealth, the settlers in Stellenbosch district were essentially part of a community of slaveholders. The contours of the settler community fundamentally influenced every step of the legal process. Members of the settler community were in a situation of face-to-face interaction. This meant that often, in conflicts between settlers, recourse to the law was seen as a last resort and mo.re emphasis was placed on the maintenance of personal social relationships. However, this community, of which a landed elite stood in the forefront, had discordant features and domination of the poor by the rich did not go without any struggle. The features of the settler community also fundamentally influenced the position of slaves in the law. Access to the courts for the slaves for complaints against their masters was very significantly determined by conflicts which existed amongst slaveholders. In court the extent of solidarity amongst members of the community could ultimately determine the chances of success for slaves. Another way in which concerns of community influenced the legal process was by the importance which was attached to the reputations of individual slaveowners. Often such concerns overrode strictly legal ones. Even in determining the severity of sentences in criminal cases reputations of individuals were of primary importance. The VOC not only served to bolster the authority of slaveowners but also to keep the wider society in control. Therefore, it could not allow slaveholder tyranny over their labourers to go unchecked. Moreover, the legal system had to be more than simply an instrument in the hands of the master class. At the local level, the VOC could be seen to be acting in the interests of the wider society by listening to the complaints of slaves and prosecuting individual masters. Roman common law, as opposed to statutory law, was the law most commonly used in criminal cases involving slaves. This had two important implications. Firstly, Roman law did not deny the slave any personality and prosecutors constantly reminded slaveowners that slaves were persons. Secondly, Roman law had an apparent universality in that its dictates were made applicable to all in society. These factors combined to make the law perform a hegemonic function.
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The struggle for the city : alcohol, the ematsheni and popular culture in Durban, 1902-1936La Hausse, Paul January 1984 (has links)
Bibliography: pages 337-373. / This thesis concerns itself with the genesis and development of the Durban system but also provides a point of entry into the social history of Durban. There are a number of threads which hold this study together. The most central of these comprises an examination of those struggles between ordinary African people and the white rulers of the town over access to, and the production of drink generally, and utshwala in particular. The lengths to which the state in South Africa has gone in order to control the supply of alcohol, particularly utshwala, to African popular classes and the intensity of the resistance to this control has, with one notable exception, been largely ignored by historians. This neglect is understandable. Not only is the study of the making of South Africa's working classes in its infancy but regional social histories have only recently begun to make their appearance in written form. Moreover, research has tended to focus on the Transvaal, especially the Witwatersrand, and the main concern of such studies has been to concentrate on the regional with a view to arriving at more general conclusions about the state and the nature of class formation and consciousness. In their sensitivity to local-level and regional concerns, these studies are invaluable and certainly they represent an important step away from, as Tim Keegan has noted, the growing sterility of the debates on race and class, on segregationist ideology and practice, and on the nature and role of the state.
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