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A case analysis to explore black youth entrepreneurship support in eMalahleni, Mpumalanga ProvinceBoshoma, Bathandekile 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MBA)--Stellenbosch University, 2015. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The lack of jobs in South Africa and eMalahleni has caused many young people to seek their own
job opportunities in the form of setting up their own business. Despite this, many young business
people fail in their ventures due to low capital. In response to this, organisations such as the
National Youth Development Agency have created support structures to support young business
owners in their local area.
The purpose of this study is to explore the extent to which the structures and programmes to
support youth development – as far as entrepreneurship is concerned – help to cultivate the
creation of businesses among the black youth in eMalahleni. Thirty participants who are young
entrepreneurs (under 35 years) participated in interviews that helped to elucidate qualitative
information about the support structures. They were asked how the support structures had helped
them if they participated, or the reasons why they chose not to use the support structure. They
were also asked to identify potential bottlenecks or issues with the support structures that may be
preventing them from being fully accessible.
The results showed that a lack of trust in the support structures, particularly those created by the
National Youth Development Agency, was a major reason for non-participation or choice not to
use. Additionally, many felt that the hierarchy and unwelcoming atmosphere of the support
structures prevented young people from applying. Other reasons given were the fact that the
support structures may not always be geographically accessible and the fact that staff members
were not fully trained to be as helpful as possible. There are several ways in which these support
structures could be improved that are detailed in this research document. The most important
recommendation relates to ensuring that the red tape is removed to make the support structures
more helpful to a larger number of young black entrepreneurs. Creating a more local atmosphere
may also help the support structures to reach their full potential.
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The effect of post employment interventions : the case of ex-employees of the erstwhile Mpumalanga Development Corporation14 August 2012 (has links)
M.Phil. / The Social Plan is an alternative retrenchment process to section 189 of the Labour Relations Act No. 66 of 1995 as amended. When the now defunct Mpumalanga Development Corporation was dismantled in 1997, following the speech of the then Premier of the Province, of the 5 th December 1996, South Africa saw the Social Plan route being followed for the first time in its short democratic history. While the Social plan is the better of the two routes, it still looks good on paper, but has been let down by the trade unions, the employers, the development corporations and the individual beneficiaries themselves in this case. The sad part of this is that the Government departments and the development corporations are the custodians of the objectives sought and enshrined in the Social plan. Their failure to observe this fact and live up to the expectations it genders is itself an indictment on these stakeholders. The dissertation deals with the deeper analysis and findings of the events and the omissions that took place in pursuit of the implementation of this novel concept in a real life situation. Definite recommendations are made within the text that contributes to how the effort can be rescued for the benefit of the retrenchees and the economy as a whole. The approach in this work has taken the form of a literature review as well as a field survey. The field survey did not yield a very high sample, but 20 respondents, who are former employees who were retrenched following the Social Plan route, were interviewed. These respondents had been located in the former KwaNdebele and former KaNgwane regions of the Mpumalanga Province. The main problem that resulted in this research was that the country as a whole is suffering a very high rate of unemployed at 37.5% (according to the 2001 Census Report) in the Mpumalanga Province. While that needs some attention, there is an increase in the retrenchments coming as a result of various global and domestic factors. These collectively impact the employment situation more adversely than positively. The social plan being one tool chosen to alleviate the problems identified in its own self contained rationale for being, has failed to live up to the expectations of all the stakeholders affected by it. The experience of the stakeholders in the first attempt to implement the social plan, have defeated the very objectives of the social plan, which include, inter alia, the following: a ...to avoid job losses and employment decline wherever possible. In cases where large job losses are unavoidable, it would seek to actively manage retrenchments and ameliorate their effects on individuals and local economies". The findings in this study revealed that the social plan rather deepened the problem and exacerbated rather than alleviated it. This adversity is not due to the nature of the social plan as an approach and a route to meeting the aims of its creation. It is rather reflective of the way and attitude with which parties to the social plan failed to apply their best abilities and efforts in its application. The dissertation also touches on entrepreneurships, Post employment and the currently raging broad based black economic empowerment drive that has taken the country by storm in various sectors. The attempt by this drive is to address the possible acceleration of the integration of black people into business at all levels and not just at SMMEs or post employment. One could say the whole BBBEE drive seeks to address even the pre-employment era in the life of a black South African.
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Experiences of the Nkomazi local municipality in the provision of water services to poor communitiesMashele, Michael Thomas 18 March 2014 (has links)
The South African Constitution, brought about democratic and developmental reforms that gave local government certain responsibilities, the supply of water services, amongst others. According to Naidoo (2011), the provision of water services was a vital developmental process that worked towards quality service realization that local government was grappling with.
In this research report, a qualitative research method of in-depth interviews was conducted on a small target group and a few municipality documents were analyzed. Mixed perceptions and a range of problems, amongst which capacity problems, were some of the findings identified by the research. The effects of non-provision of water services and the benefits of water provision were also dealt with in the report.
Eighteen (18) years into democracy, the majority of rural municipalities were still experiencing problems in the provision of water services to poor communities. Other than the usual experiences of municipalities in the provision of water services, Nkomazi Local Municipality encountered capacity problems which were complicated by its predominantly rural nature.
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Relationships between household resource dependence, socio-economic factors, and livelihood strategies: a case study from Bushbuckridge, South AfricaRagie, Fatima Hassen January 2016 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of requirements for the degree of Master of Science. Johannesburg, 2016. / Environmental income in rural socio-ecological systems consists of the monetary and non-monetary value derived by people from non-agricultural ecosystem goods and services that are sourced from wild or uncultivated natural systems. This environmental income forms an important part of rural households' diversified livelihood income portfolios and includes resources like fuelwood, herbs, fruits, game, medicinal plants and other materials that are used for clothing, shelter, arts and crafts. Rural households also depend on income from two other land-based income streams, crop farming and livestock husbandry, and off-farm activities income stream, which includes grants and wages, for both consumption and cash generation. While rural livelihoods are becoming increasingly reliant on off-farm income, land-based livelihood income streams (including environmental income) still play an important supplementary role, especially to satisfy subsistence needs.
Past studies in the developing world have quantified livelihood incomes and have often associated these income values to the socio-economic characteristics of households. However, neither do these studies examine the different livelihood income streams collectively as a portfolio, nor do they sufficiently account for and create understanding around the correlations within the suites of influencing factors. Livelihoods are often analysed using frameworks that are used to understand households' livelihood income portfolios, especially their environmental income dependencies, in relation to influencing factors. These frameworks can be useful tools to gain a quantitative understanding of households’ livelihood income portfolios. This study aimed to quantify and understand the contribution of environmental income to rural households as part of their diversified livelihood portfolios and relate these livelihood portfolios to household socio-economic characteristics and adopted livelihood strategies using the Sustainable Livelihoods Approach (SLA) framework. Interviews were conducted during 2010 in 590 households spread across nine villages in the Bushbuckridge region, Mpumalanga, South Africa. The interviews focussed on the quantification of four livelihood income streams — environmental, livestock, crops and off-farm. These income streams were assessed at three points of assessment (POAs) in the livelihood income chain — the initial, primary income value into the household, the value used for household consumption, and the amount of cash generated. Livelihood incomes were analysed using summary statistics, frequency distributions and ordinations. These were used to gauge the value of these incomes to individual households as well as to the system as a whole, in both absolute terms and relative to each other. Ordinations were then used to explore the relationships between variables within the suite of household socio-economic characteristics and within the suite of adopted household livelihood strategies, and finally incorporating both. Lastly, the proportional
environmental income dependencies of households were explored using global fractional logit generalised linear models (GLMs). The models first included the socio-economic characteristics as explanatory variables, and then the adopted livelihood strategies.
Almost all households used the environmental, crop and off-farm income streams for primary income and consumption, with the primary income from off-farm activities being in the form of cash generation. In contrast, less than 12% of households were involved in the primary collection and consumption of livestock income. In general, fewer households were involved in the cash generation from the land-based livelihood income streams. However, these sellers represented a larger fraction of users for the livestock income stream then when compared to the other two land-based income streams. While livestock income was used less frequently than the other two land-based income streams, it was comparatively as valuable as the off-farm income stream to its users. Overall, absolute changes in the correlated land-based income streams were not related to the off-farm income streams. Relative variation in livestock primary income was related to the relative variation in primary income values from off-farm activities. Relative variation in the crops and environmental cash generation was related to corresponding cash generation values from off-farm activities. Whether the livelihood incomes were examined for primary income, consumption or cash generation, the worth of the different livelihoods were valued differently to the socio-ecological system as a whole compared to their value to households that were involved in those activities, and their value to individuals within households.
The collective variations at all POAs of the land-based strategies were associated with different sets of household socio-economic characteristics and adopted livelihood strategies, compared to the sets that were associated with the off-farm livelihood income stream. Factors that were associated with an income stream at one POA did not necessarily have the same association at the other POAs. The choice of adopted livelihood strategies reduces the need to understand and account for all factors that influences the translation of different types of capital, which includes household socio-economic characteristics, into livelihood incomes. This simplified connection is crucial to standardising and creating models that can be put into practice at all POAs within the livelihood chain in these socio-ecological systems. Furthermore, proportional environmental income dependencies can be useful for evaluating how the worth of environmental income is related quantitatively to influencing factors. However, many of the dynamics between influencing factors and the income streams that contribute to environmental income stream are not captured.
The methodological approach used in this study in analysing the livelihoods of households in the Bushbuckridge region provides a standardised framework of analysis. The quantification of the
livelihood data in common monetary units at the three different POAs of primary income, household consumption and cash generation, allows the analysis to be expanded to different platforms of understanding. The collective understanding of the variation between the different income streams can be expanded to understand the worth of these income streams to households and individuals within these households, as well as to understand the worth of these income streams to the socio-ecological system as a whole. When combining the collective understanding of the income portfolios at the different POAs with a collective understanding of the suite of household socio-economic characteristics or with a collective understanding of the suite of adopted livelihood strategies, a platform for understanding the dynamics within livelihoods is created. This has potential for creating workable predictive models of environmental income dependency in these systems, especially using the adopted livelihood strategies. The results of this dissertation also raise caution that analyses of these socio-ecological systems needs to be interpreted at all POAs simultaneously with the collective understanding of the links between incomes and socio-economic characteristics, and with the links between incomes and adopted livelihood strategies.
There is more value during strategic planning in asking how to encourage a set of adopted livelihood strategies that are associated with the desired dependencies than asking which socio-economic household factors are likely to result in said dependencies. Policy intervention in the area that is aimed at increasing households' dependence on land-based activities needs to differentiate whether it will be encouraging the subsistence sourcing and consumption of resources, or will it encourage the cash generation from these income streams. Particular attention needs to be paid as to which households will be addressed. It will be wiser to implement some interventions across all households and rather focus other interventions on a few more involved households. / LG2017
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Room to manoeuvre: understanding the development of provincial government In South Africa, 1994-2004Rapoo, Thabo Jackson 26 October 2006 (has links)
Faculty of Humanities
School of Social Science / Since its inception in 1994, South Africa’s federal system of government has been the subject
of intensive scholarly debates and wide-ranging academic writing. In particular, the
functioning of the country’s provincial institutions has engendered heated public debates
over the years about whether or not they have played their proper role as institutions of
democratic governance. The major challenge that faced the framers of the country’s new
constitution, and which continues to face policy makers currently, was to create functioning
and effective democratic institutions of government at sub-national level. In addition to their
role as democratic/political institutions of governance, the provinces are also agents of
socio-economic development and the delivery of basic social services to citizens.
In the course of attempting to fulfil their functional responsibilities since 1994, the provinces
have encountered enormous political, constitutional, administrative and logistical problems
that have led to widespread dissatisfaction about their performance and effectiveness. In fact,
this dissatisfaction has also led to fundamental questions being raised about the future of the
provinces in South Africa. This thesis seeks to evaluate the performance and effectiveness of
the provincial system during the 1994-2004 period, by looking at the question: to what extent
has the provincial system of government fulfilled its responsibilities of promoting democratic
governance and ensuring effective delivery of social services to citizens at sub-national level?
It also provides an in-depth examination and analysis of the development of South Africa’s
federal system of government between 1994 and 2004.
The study utilised a wide range of research materials gathered through in-depth interviews,
an opinion survey, direct observations, official documents, published and unpublished
documents, and numerous other sources.
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Respirable quartz in coal mines in the Mpumalanga region of South Africa over the period 2002 to 2006Doyle, Bruce Anthony 16 April 2010 (has links)
MPH, Occupational Hygiene, School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, 2009 / Introduction:
By 2030 silicosis should be eliminated in South Africa. This statement was made by
the Labour Minister, Mr. Membathisi Mdladlana on 28 June 2004 during the launch of
the National Programme for the Elimination of Silicosis in Johannesburg. Following
this launch the mining industry set its own milestone, which is to eradicate this disease
by 2014. Historically research has generally focused on the health effects associated
with exposures to coal dust, whilst limited work has been done on personal exposures
to respirable crystalline silica (commonly known as quartz), which is the main cause of
silicosis in the mining industry. Given the number of people that are involved in coal
mining, together with the seriousness of diseases associated with respirable quartz
exposure, such as silicosis and tuberculosis, it is important to quantify these
exposures. The aim of this study was to ascertain the magnitude of employee
exposures to respirable quartz, in the Mpumalanga region of the South African coal
mining industry, over the period 2002 and 2006.
Objectives:
The objectives of this study are:
• To describe respirable quartz concentrations in 41 coal mines in the
Mpumalanga region of South Africa over the period 2002 to 2006;
• To compare respirable quartz concentrations in nine magisterial districts of the
Mpumalanga region of South Africa over the period 2002 to 2006, to the South
African Occupational exposure limit of 0.1 mg/m3 and the American Congress
of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH) Threshold Limit value of
0.025 mg/m3;
• To describe twenty four activity areas in 41 coal mines in the Mpumalanga
region of South Africa, over the period 2002 to 2006, which exceed 50 % of the
South African Occupational exposure limit of 0.1 mg/m3 (generally referred to
as the action limit).
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Methodology:
The study setting comprises the workings of coal mines within the Mpumalanga
region, where various types of occupations exist. The research conducted consisted
of a descriptive study of retrospective respirable Time Weighted Average quartz
concentration results obtained from mines that use the company Colliery
Environmental Control Services (CECS) as their occupational hygiene service
provider. CECS provided the data that was analysed for this research. Sample
collection and analysis for respirable quartz was done using widely accepted
International methodologies.
Results:
The overall median respirable quartz concentration for all mines were 0.007 mg/m3,
whilst the mean was 0.038 mg/m3. The highest respirable quartz concentration
measured was 2.197 mg/m3 and the lowest 0.000 mg/m3. The majority of the mines,
i.e. 30, are situated in the Kriel, Secunda and Witbank magisterial districts, these
districts account for 78 % of the total number of measurements taken. A total of 191
measurements (8 %) and 674 (29 %) exceeded the South African OEL of 0.1 mg/m3
and ACGIH TLV of 0.025 mg/m3 respectively with the Secunda district having the
most measurements that exceeded both sets of limits (58 and 205 respectively). The
majority of measurements, i.e. 1784 (76 %), were from six activity areas and four
hundred and ninety one (21 %) of the total measurements taken were from the
continuous miner activity area. The highest ranked activity area is the longwall mining
one, which has a median respirable quartz concentration of 0.044 mg/m3. The highest
respirable quartz concentration, 2.197 mg/m3, was measured in the roving plant
activity area, which was followed by measurements of 1.706 mg/m3 and 1.528 mg/m3
in the continuous miner and unknown activity areas respectively. The longwall mining
activity area recorded the most measurements that exceeded the 50 % action limit
and 0.1 mg/m3 OEL, these been 47 and 38 respectively.
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Discussion and Conclusion:
This research report describes similar exposure findings as has been reported
internationally. Persons employed in the high risk activity areas on the 41 mines
studied over the period 2002 to 2006 in the Mpumalanga region are at risk of
developing quartz-associated diseases, such as silicosis.
Recommendations:
It is recommended that the effectiveness of implemented interventions need to be
investigated and appropriate intervention strategies be implemented. Airborne quartz
contents from the nine magisterial districts and 24 activity areas should be analysed
and individual samples taken from the high risk tasks should be individually analysed
for their percentage airborne quartz content.
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Characterisation of the hydrological processes and responses to rehabilitation of a headwater wetland of the Sand River, South Africa.Riddell, Edward Sebastian. January 2011 (has links)
The erosion of headwater wetlands in the Sand River catchment, in the lowveld of north-eastern South Africa has led to a focus on their rehabilitation, both for livelihood security for those that use them for subsistence agriculture, as well as for provision of streamflow regulation services for the Sand River itself. One such wetland, the Craigieburn-Manalana itself undergoing severe erosion was subject to technical rehabilitation using concrete weirs and gabion dams to stabilize the erosion gullies during 2007. Through a series of papers the research discussed in this thesis examined the response of the wetland?s hydrodynamics to the implementation of these measures. Through the installation of a network of hydrometric apparatus the research has shown that the wetlands hydrology is largely controlled by the presence of both horizontal and vertical clay aquicludes within a hydraulically conductive sandy matrix. The sequence of these aquicludes had allowed for artesian phreatic surface phenomena identified in a relatively hydrologically intact region of the wetland. The gully erosion had initiated hydraulic drawdown of the wetland?s water table leading to the desiccation of the system. The construction of a buttress weir within the erosion gully had restored the wetlands hydrodynamics to that typical of conditions upstream of a clay-plug. The research also explored the role that clay plays in terms of controlling the wetland?s hydro-geomorphic setting through geophysical analysis. A conceptual model was then derived that states that these wetlands are held in place by clay-plugs that form through clay illuviation from the hillslopes at regions of valley confinement. This has important implications for the connectivity of wetland process domains. The research also determined the inputs of surface and subsurface flows to the wetland and it was found through detailed examination of soil moisture responses and variably saturated soil physics modelling using the HYDRUS model, that the wetland is hydrologically connected to its contributing hillslope by threshold induced preferential flow pathways, via macropores, that only respond after specific antecedent soil moisture conditions are met. In addition, the thesis describes novel approaches to use information provided by soil scientists for the development of catchment hydrological models. It was shown that the use of this hydropedology information improved the low flow response function of the catchment model, ACRU. This development has important implications for up-scaling of catchment process domains, or hydrological response units by being able to generalize on hillslope hydrological responses based on configuration of their soil type elements. The research also undertook to examine the role that the wetlands play in catchment processes. It was found through water budgeting, supported by hydrological time-series, stable isotope analysis and the quantification of vegetation water use within the wetland and contributing catchment, that these wetlands do not augment baseflows during the dry season. Furthermore, it is only early on during the wet season that these systems may attenuate peak flows, thereafter they act as conduits for high storm flows. Similarities emanated from this research with previous hydrological studies of headwater wetland systems in southern Africa and these are discussed. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2011.
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A critical investigation of the impact of on-consumption alcohol outlets on land use compatibility in residential areas in the Umjindi local municipality area of jurisdiction, Mpumalanga Province.Ntiwane, Bongane Cornelius. 12 September 2014 (has links)
The compatibility of on-site consumption alcohol outlets as land use is predicted by the
acceptance level of the utility or disutility they enjoy amongst residents in a neighbourhood. The
density of alcohol outlets is argued in literature as correlating to the significant positive rate of
amenity effects that include property crime, alcohol related arrests, drunk-driving, fatal and
severe alcohol-induced accidents, violence and assault amongst many others. The problems
associated with on-site consumption alcohol outlets have been insistently brought to the attention
of the Umjindi Local Municipality in the Ehlanzeni District area in Mpumalanga Province by the
residents of the Emjindini neighbourhood. The study is based on the hypothesis that the high
density of on-site consumption alcohol outlets contributes to the incompatibility of such outlets
with residential areas. In addressing the research sub-questions and validating the research
hypothesis, the study adopted various methods (including land use surveys, interviews,
administration of questionnaires, literature review and document review) for the collection,
analysis, interpretation and discussion of data. The study reveals that the higher density of alcohol
consumption outlets is significant in areas of low socioeconomic status. The Emjindini
Townships are located with the density of 1 on-site consumption alcohol outlet per 263 people.
Liquor legislation in South Africa leaves a lot to be desired in its guidelines for alcohol outlet
density, public participation, location radius and local authority involvement. In addition, our
findings showed that the significantly unacceptable level of impact thereof is experienced
especially in the night, in areas characterised by the high density of on-site consumption alcohol
outlets. The on-site consumption alcohol outlets are seen as compatible land uses in residential
areas for the reason that, the unacceptable level of impact is insignificant during the day. The
adoption of preferred and practical guidelines related to the locality and density of on-site
consumption alcohol outlets, compatibility performance standards and public participation are
recommended for policy and practice. The amendment to the liquor law is subsequently proposed
in this study. / M.U.R.D.P. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2014.
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Geochemistry and structure of the archaean granitoid-supracrustal terrane, southeastern Transvaal and northern Natal.Smith, Roric Gerard. 03 October 2014 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 1987.
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Factors influencing market access and livestock marketing inefficiency in Mpumalanga Province, South AfricaSehar, Malika 01 1900 (has links)
Livestock production is the primary financial resource for most farmers in Mpumalanga
province. Although commercial farmers require necessary equipment and technology to
maximise their production and profit, but emerging small-scale farmers in the province face
many challenges which have hindered their efforts to improve their livelihood, besides
intervening in the procedure of commercialisation. Therefore, this study investigates the
socioeconomic characteristics of the livestock farmers in the province, the determinants of
market access and those influencing marketing inefficiency, with a view to developing policy
recommendations.
Structured questionnaire was administered to 300 farmers in order to capture information on
market access and factors that could influence marketing inefficiency. Descriptive statistics
was utilised regarding basic characteristics of the households. A logit regression model was
used to analyse market access (sale of livestock through formal markets) using STATA.
Marketing inefficiency was computed as the reciprocal of marketing efficiency which was
calculated using Shepherd formula, while the two stage Least Square regression was applied
for factors influencing marketing inefficiency after identifying market access endogenous
variable.
The study’s extrapolations indicated that 7 variables were consequential at 1% and 5%
significance level with market access, namely transport ownership, transport cost, market
price information, advertisement, farmers’ perception, marketing channel used and
municipality. In addition, the results of the two stage least square model indicated that only 3
variables had remarkable significance with regard to marketing inefficiency. These are market
access, livestock composition and infrastructure.
The findings of the study evidenced that to reduce marketing inefficiency, then it is
paramount to enable the easy dissemination of information and improving infrastructure so as
to give small-scale farmers easy access to the markets. Consequently, addressing marketing
constraints will provide an insight that will allow development of strategies to deal with those
problems correctly and more efficiently. The study recommended that focus should be centred
on addressing the constraints existing in livestock marketing system to enhance access to
markets by encouraging youth participation in agricultural activities and providing training
programmes and easy access for marketing related information. Also, infrastructure deserves
to be given more attention by renovating the marketing facilities especially road networks in
rural areas. In addition, extension officers and veterinary services are to provide help and
support in preventing infections and diseases in order to minimise the losses. / Agriculture, Animal Health and Human Ecology / M. Sc. (Agriculture)
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