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Os Objetivos de Desenvolvimento do Milênio: a vida segura na governamentalidade planetáriaOliveira, Maria Cecília da Silva 04 March 2016 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2016-03-04 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / This research analyses the investment in the aesthetics of secure life, which emerges from the proximities between development and security. The focus of the analysis is on the governmental practices accompanying the Millennium Development Goals derived from the Millennium Declaration of the United Nations. The aim is to study development through the relationship between government and governmentality, which evidence the investments in the management of life by means of political economy as a principle of calculation aiming at the improvement of human capital. Through the depletion of biopolitics, this thesis shows the operation of planetary governmentality through the shifts that make poverty management a shared objective aimed at the planet's population, providing interventions and regulations of governmental practices in environments. The United Nations used the turn of the millennium as a strategy to upgrade its structure and mission, and adopted the goal of reducing poverty and hunger as a transterritorial risk. This approach triggered development discourses about promoting sustainability, financial aid flows, expert knowledge and repositioned the UN s role in the humanitarian field. Relations formerly centered on the state were reshaped to include and expand civil society participation, illustrating how the diplomatic dispositif and development programs are actualized by the exercise of neoliberal freedom in the 21st century. This is the main axis of investment that improves the productivity of the population without giving up the predominance of control, and that makes security an essential mechanism for capitalist development to operate its technologies. The genealogy of power discussed by Michel Foucault guides the mapping of strategic knowledge produced in main conferences. These conferences highlight the interest in new nuances produced by the introduction of the diplomatic dispositif in the field of political economy, which acts as technology and language to expand development programs between the twentieth and twenty-first century. The emergence of food security was crucial in connecting sustainable development and the management of hunger, environment and misery on the planet. The case study shows how the use of food security in Brazil operationalized technologies to expand the discourse of the MDGs and the ethics of secure life as a universal project / Esta pesquisa aborda a emergência e investimento na estética da vida segura, a
partir das proximidades entre desenvolvimento e segurança, situando as práticas
governamentais esperadas pelos Objetivos de Desenvolvimento do Milênio das Nações
Unidas, derivados da Declaração do Milênio. O objetivo é apresentar os estudos sobre o
desenvolvimento a partir do interesse nas relações governo e governamentalidade, que
evidenciam os investimentos na gestão da vida por meio da economia política como
princípio de cálculo para o aprimoramento do capital humano. A partir do esgotamento
da biopolítica, esta tese mostra o funcionamento da governamentalidade planetária por
meio dos deslocamentos que fazem da gestão da pobreza um objetivo compartilhado
voltado à população do planeta, que proporcionam intervenções e regulações das
práticas governamentais nos ambientes.
As Nações Unidas utilizou a virada do milênio como estratégia para atualizar sua
estrutura e missão, e adotou a redução da pobreza e da fome como risco transterritorial.
Isto a fez acionar os discursos do desenvolvimento para impulsionar a sustentabilidade,
os fluxos financeiros à assistência, os saberes dos especialistas, e reposicionar seu papel
no campo dos humanitarismos. As relações centradas no Estado foram redimensionadas
para incluir a participação da sociedade civil ampliada, mostrando que o dispositivo
diplomático e os programas de desenvolvimento são acionados pelos exercícios da
liberdade neoliberal no século XXI. Este é o principal eixo de investimento que
viabiliza a produtividade da população sem abdicar da predominância dos controles, e
que fazem da segurança mecanismo essencial para que o desenvolvimento capitalista
possa operar suas tecnologias. A genealogia do poder tratada por Michel Foucault
orienta o mapeamento de saberes estratégicos produzidos nas chamadas grandes
conferências que marcam o interesse em ressaltar novas nuances produzidos pela
introdução do dispositivo diplomático no campo da economia política, como tecnologia
e linguagem própria da expansão dos programas de desenvolvimento entre o século XX
e XXI. A emergência da segurança alimentar foi decisiva para associar
desenvolvimento sustentável, gestão da fome, do meio ambiente e das misérias no
planeta.
O estudo de caso apresenta como o uso da segurança alimentar no Brasil
operacionalizou as tecnologias necessárias para expandir o discurso dos ODM e da
estética da vida segura como projeto universal
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Os Objetivos de Desenvolvimento do Milênio: a vida segura na governamentalidade planetáriaOliveira, Maria Cecília da Silva 04 March 2016 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-04-26T14:55:47Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
Maria Cecilia da Silva Oliveira.pdf: 3966277 bytes, checksum: 4c57885866b646fbc854e0618ac947d8 (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2016-03-04 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / This research analyses the investment in the aesthetics of secure life, which emerges from the proximities between development and security. The focus of the analysis is on the governmental practices accompanying the Millennium Development Goals derived from the Millennium Declaration of the United Nations. The aim is to study development through the relationship between government and governmentality, which evidence the investments in the management of life by means of political economy as a principle of calculation aiming at the improvement of human capital. Through the depletion of biopolitics, this thesis shows the operation of planetary governmentality through the shifts that make poverty management a shared objective aimed at the planet's population, providing interventions and regulations of governmental practices in environments. The United Nations used the turn of the millennium as a strategy to upgrade its structure and mission, and adopted the goal of reducing poverty and hunger as a transterritorial risk. This approach triggered development discourses about promoting sustainability, financial aid flows, expert knowledge and repositioned the UN s role in the humanitarian field. Relations formerly centered on the state were reshaped to include and expand civil society participation, illustrating how the diplomatic dispositif and development programs are actualized by the exercise of neoliberal freedom in the 21st century. This is the main axis of investment that improves the productivity of the population without giving up the predominance of control, and that makes security an essential mechanism for capitalist development to operate its technologies. The genealogy of power discussed by Michel Foucault guides the mapping of strategic knowledge produced in main conferences. These conferences highlight the interest in new nuances produced by the introduction of the diplomatic dispositif in the field of political economy, which acts as technology and language to expand development programs between the twentieth and twenty-first century. The emergence of food security was crucial in connecting sustainable development and the management of hunger, environment and misery on the planet. The case study shows how the use of food security in Brazil operationalized technologies to expand the discourse of the MDGs and the ethics of secure life as a universal project / Esta pesquisa aborda a emergência e investimento na estética da vida segura, a
partir das proximidades entre desenvolvimento e segurança, situando as práticas
governamentais esperadas pelos Objetivos de Desenvolvimento do Milênio das Nações
Unidas, derivados da Declaração do Milênio. O objetivo é apresentar os estudos sobre o
desenvolvimento a partir do interesse nas relações governo e governamentalidade, que
evidenciam os investimentos na gestão da vida por meio da economia política como
princípio de cálculo para o aprimoramento do capital humano. A partir do esgotamento
da biopolítica, esta tese mostra o funcionamento da governamentalidade planetária por
meio dos deslocamentos que fazem da gestão da pobreza um objetivo compartilhado
voltado à população do planeta, que proporcionam intervenções e regulações das
práticas governamentais nos ambientes.
As Nações Unidas utilizou a virada do milênio como estratégia para atualizar sua
estrutura e missão, e adotou a redução da pobreza e da fome como risco transterritorial.
Isto a fez acionar os discursos do desenvolvimento para impulsionar a sustentabilidade,
os fluxos financeiros à assistência, os saberes dos especialistas, e reposicionar seu papel
no campo dos humanitarismos. As relações centradas no Estado foram redimensionadas
para incluir a participação da sociedade civil ampliada, mostrando que o dispositivo
diplomático e os programas de desenvolvimento são acionados pelos exercícios da
liberdade neoliberal no século XXI. Este é o principal eixo de investimento que
viabiliza a produtividade da população sem abdicar da predominância dos controles, e
que fazem da segurança mecanismo essencial para que o desenvolvimento capitalista
possa operar suas tecnologias. A genealogia do poder tratada por Michel Foucault
orienta o mapeamento de saberes estratégicos produzidos nas chamadas grandes
conferências que marcam o interesse em ressaltar novas nuances produzidos pela
introdução do dispositivo diplomático no campo da economia política, como tecnologia
e linguagem própria da expansão dos programas de desenvolvimento entre o século XX
e XXI. A emergência da segurança alimentar foi decisiva para associar
desenvolvimento sustentável, gestão da fome, do meio ambiente e das misérias no
planeta.
O estudo de caso apresenta como o uso da segurança alimentar no Brasil
operacionalizou as tecnologias necessárias para expandir o discurso dos ODM e da
estética da vida segura como projeto universal
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Bridging the digital divide : Improving Internet usage in Eastern AfricaEshetu, Sofia, Kinuthia, Caroline January 2011 (has links)
Internet is viewed as the most vital digital technology in the globe. Eastern Africa has the least penetration of ICT per capita in the world. Internet is a valuable resource that has propelled enormous economic growth in many developed countries. In order for Eastern African governments to narrow the socio-economic divide between developed countries and themselves, there is need to overcome this digital handicap. Enormous investments in ICT infrastructure are essential. The governments must participate in making crucial decisions to wisely allocate the limited resources to improve the current infrastructure.This thesis investigates Internet use, access and penetration in Eastern Africa. Theoretical research has been carried out to elaborate on the subject matter. Through empirical study, we will come up with a fresh way to verify and understand the Internet situation in the region. / Program: Magisterutbildning i informatik
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Perceptions of rural water service delivery : the case of Ugu District Municipality / Timothy Bheka CeleCele, Timothy Bheka January 2012 (has links)
The start of the 21th century is notable for the apparent lack of safe drinking water and
sanitation. Over one billion people in all parts of the world lack access to clean water. Most live
in developing countries, such as Africa. Unsafe water and poor sanitation have been primary
causal factors in the vast majority of water-borne diseases, especially diarrheal ones.
The South African Constitution (Act 108 of 1996, Chapter 2, Section 24) states: “Everyone has
the right:
(a) To an environment that is not harmful to their health and their wellbeing; and
(b) To have the environment protected, for the benefit of present and future generations, through
reasonable legislative and other measures that prevent pollution and ecological degradation;
promote conservation; ecologically sustainable development, and the use of natural
resources, while promoting justifiable economic and social development.”
Secondly, section 27 states that:
“Everyone has the right to have access to:
(a) Health-care services, including reproductive health care;
(b) Sufficient food and water; and
(c) Social security, including, if they are unable to support themselves and their dependants,
appropriate social assistance.”
These factors have prompted this research within the Ugu District Municipality on the
perceptions of inadequate rural water service delivery. This study reveals information on those
areas in the Ugu District Municipality, which do not have access to clean water, and on the
health hazards that might lead to death if residents’ lack of access to clean water persists.
The Ugu District Municipality, is situated in KwaZulu-Natal Province, and covers a surface area
of 5866 km2. There are six local municipalities in this district. These are: Ezinqoleni, Umzumbe,
Umziwabantu, Hibiscus Coast, Umdoni and Vulamehlo. The node is 77% rural and 23% urban,
and the total population for this area is 704027 (Ugu District Municipality IDP 2nd
2011/2012:19). / M. Development and Management (Water Studies), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2012
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Perceptions of rural water service delivery : the case of Ugu District Municipality / Timothy Bheka CeleCele, Timothy Bheka January 2012 (has links)
The start of the 21th century is notable for the apparent lack of safe drinking water and
sanitation. Over one billion people in all parts of the world lack access to clean water. Most live
in developing countries, such as Africa. Unsafe water and poor sanitation have been primary
causal factors in the vast majority of water-borne diseases, especially diarrheal ones.
The South African Constitution (Act 108 of 1996, Chapter 2, Section 24) states: “Everyone has
the right:
(a) To an environment that is not harmful to their health and their wellbeing; and
(b) To have the environment protected, for the benefit of present and future generations, through
reasonable legislative and other measures that prevent pollution and ecological degradation;
promote conservation; ecologically sustainable development, and the use of natural
resources, while promoting justifiable economic and social development.”
Secondly, section 27 states that:
“Everyone has the right to have access to:
(a) Health-care services, including reproductive health care;
(b) Sufficient food and water; and
(c) Social security, including, if they are unable to support themselves and their dependants,
appropriate social assistance.”
These factors have prompted this research within the Ugu District Municipality on the
perceptions of inadequate rural water service delivery. This study reveals information on those
areas in the Ugu District Municipality, which do not have access to clean water, and on the
health hazards that might lead to death if residents’ lack of access to clean water persists.
The Ugu District Municipality, is situated in KwaZulu-Natal Province, and covers a surface area
of 5866 km2. There are six local municipalities in this district. These are: Ezinqoleni, Umzumbe,
Umziwabantu, Hibiscus Coast, Umdoni and Vulamehlo. The node is 77% rural and 23% urban,
and the total population for this area is 704027 (Ugu District Municipality IDP 2nd
2011/2012:19). / M. Development and Management (Water Studies), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2012
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Supervision and trust in community health worker programmes at scale: developing a district level supportive supervision framework for ward-based outreach teams in North West Province, South AfricaAssegaai, Tumelo January 2021 (has links)
Philosophiae Doctor - PhD / Introduction: National community health worker (CHW) programmes are to an increasing extent being implemented in health systems globally, mirrored in South Africa in the ward-based outreach team (WBOT) strategy. In many countries, including South Africa, a major challenge impacting the performance and sustainability of scaled-up CHW programmes is ensuring adequate support from and supervision by the local health system. Supervisory systems, where they exist, are usually corrective and hierarchical in nature, and implementation remains poor. In the South African context, the absence of any guidance on CHW supportive supervision has led to varied practices across the country. Improved approaches to supportive supervision are considered critical for CHW programme performance. However, there is relatively little understanding of how this can be done sustainably at scale, and effective CHW supervisory models remain elusive. Research to date has mostly positioned supervision as a technical process rather than a set of relationships, with the former testing specific interventions rather than developing holistic approaches attuned to local contexts. This doctoral study was exploratory in nature, seeking to generate an in-depth and contextualised understanding of the supervision phenomenon in one specific district in the North West Province (NWP) in South Africa. Using co-production methodology in an iterative approach, the study culminated in the formulation of a supportive supervision framework with CHWs and other frontline actors. Methods: The study was based on a holistic conceptual framework of supportive supervision, which was viewed as comprising three core functions ‒ accountability, development and support ‒ embedded in a complex and multi-level system of resources, people and relationships. To address the study objectives, the research used a mix of qualitative and quantitative methods. Three studies were conducted in a phased process: study 1 comprised a qualitative description of policy and practices in two districts related to the supervision of WBOTs; study 2 identified the main actors and mapped the supervisory system of WBOTs in the district, using social network analysis (SNA); and study 3 involved a qualitative exploration of workplace and interpersonal trust factors in the district and the supervisory system of WBOTs in the district. These three studies provided inputs for a workshop aimed at developing recommendations for a district-level, WBOT supportive supervisory framework. Four published papers reporting on the research conducted are presented in this thesis. It should be noted that the research was conducted during a turbulent political and administrative period in the NWP, when the WBOT programme changed from being a flagship programme for the country to one in crisis. This shifting context needs to be borne in mind when the findings are viewed and interpreted. Results: The study identified weaknesses in both the design and implementation of the supervisory system of WBOTs, with the absence of clear guidance resulting in WBOTs and PHC facilities performing their roles in an ad hoc manner, defined within local contexts. The study documented evidence of high internal cohesion within WBOTs and (where present) with their immediate outreach team leaders (OTLs). However, the relationships between WBOTs and the
rest of the primary health care (PHC) and district health system were characterised by considerable mistrust – both towards other workers and the system as a whole. This occurred against a backdrop of increasing OTL vacancies, and the perceived abandonment of WBOT
training and development systems and career opportunities. These findings are not dissimilar to those reported previously on the WBOT programme in South Africa and in programmes in other low-resource settings. Nevertheless, through its in-depth, exploratory and participatory approaches, this study provides additional insights into the phenomenon of supportive supervision. Firstly, in conceptualising supportive supervision as a set of ‘bundled’ practices within complex local health systems, the findings reflected the complexity of everyday realities and lived experiences. Secondly, through the embedded nature of the research and the phased data-collection process, the study was able to observe the impact of wider health system contexts and crises on the coalface functioning of the WBOT programme. Thirdly, the study emphasised how supportive supervision depends on healthy relational dynamics and trust relationships, and, finally, how a co-production approach can translate broad guidance, experience and theoretical understanding into meaningful, local practice owned by all the actors involved. Ultimately, the process of engagement, building relationships and forging consensus proved to be more significant than the supportive supervision framework itself. Conclusion: The lack of explicit, coherent and holistic guidance in developing CHW supportive
supervision guidance and the failure to address supervision constraints at a local level undermine the performance and sustainability of CHW programmes. Effective supportive supervisory systems require bottom-up collaborative platforms characterised by active participation, sharing of local tacit knowledge and mutual learning. Supervisory systems also need to be designed in ways that promote relationships and generate trust between CHW programmes, other actors and the health system.
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Political unification before economic integration : a critical analysis of Kwame Nkrumah's arguments on the United States of AfricaGudeta, Selamawit Tadesse 01 1900 (has links)
Kwame Nkrumah was the first African leader to pursue the idea of Africa’s continent-wide
unity with fervour. Many thought that African unity will only be the pooling of poverty and
that Nkrumah’s dream was impossible. Nkrumah was known for his philosophy "Seek ye
first the political kingdom and all things shall be added unto it". He thought that political
unity should precede economic unity, which would naturally follow. Even though the newly
independent African states agreed on the necessity of unity, his philosophy was not
welcomed when the Organisation of African Unity was established in Addis Ababa
(Ethiopia) in 1963. Rather, delegates opted for incremental political integration leading to
economic integration –an aspiration that Africa is still struggling to bring to fruition. This
study demonstrates that Nkrumah’s idea of political unity before economic integration was
and still is valid for Africa’s continent-wide unity. To this end, the study will use textual
sources and use diachronic and integrative approaches as analytical tools. / Political Sciences / M.A. (International Politics)
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