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International Land Acquisitions: Kaweri Coffee Plantation’s Impact on Community Development in Mubende, UgandaGardner, Kathryn January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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A Leadership Portrait of Janet Baker: Twenty-Three Years of District LeadershipTheurer, Pamela J. January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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Working and living condition in contemporary South African farmlands: exploring the impacts of tenure reforms on farm workers and labour tenants, a study of Bethal districtOkpa, Michael Evalsam 28 January 2016 (has links)
A Research to the Development Studies Department, Faculty of Humanities of the University of the Witwatersrand, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for a Master’s Degree (M.A) in Development Studies.
27 AUGUST, 2015 / The relationship between farmers and farm workers in South Africa in one steeped in controversy, yet this area of study has received little attention. Agrarian history in South Africa is topical especially when considering the interaction between farmers (predominantly white) and farm workers (almost entirely black) in a capitalist economy. Farm workers current social and economic situation is a product of colonialism, segregationist and apartheid policies, as well as capitalist development and post-apartheid development strategy.
This study hence analyses the social cohesion within the commercial farming community, placed against the backdrop of the Land Reform Programme – tenure reform. The social relations and labour are highly shaped by the capitalist mode of production and through the control of capital. Total institutions, domestic governance, and paternalism, impedes successful tenure reform. The study reveals a mutual cohesion between farmer and their employees based on a variety of reasons ranging from mutual understanding, good communication, good working relationship, and treating such other fairly. Nonetheless, this does not mean that farm workers are not being maltreated as other studies on farm relations have shown. Without a doubt, land reform particularly tenure reform has clearly tested the patience of farmers.
The study further acknowledges that the current land reform programme (especially tenure reform) is deficient, and has not benefited those for whom it was intended. Despite the legislation that have been passed in order to protect the rights of those living on farms, and to secure the labour right of those who work on them, there has been little improvement in securing tenure rights as well as the poverty level of many farm dwellers. Successful implementations of recent interventions to tenure security are the preconditions necessary for the broader land reform programme to reduce poverty levels among farm workers. Hence, securing tenure rights for farm workers must therefore be tired to programmes which aim to reduce poverty level among farm dwellers in general. Tenure reform by itself cannot alleviate rural poverty unless the government take a decisive action to stimulate the rural economy.
Equally, farm dwellers (including farm workers and labour tenants) have felt the harshest consequence of the crises facing post-apartheid South Africa’s agriculture sector. This historical process has left its legacy in post-apartheid South Africa, characterised not only by
a bimodal agricultural system but also by an unequal relation within (white) commercial farms where farm workers and labour tenants are faced with the harshest reality of poverty in the mist of agrarian wealth. This study therefore explores the disputed labour regime in the farming sector – the mechanisation and casualization of farm labour, as well as farm consolidation, both leading to a drop in rural/farm employment as an immediate consequence; and low unionisation of farm workers.
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Dena'ina and the land : the impact of changing patterns of land and resource jurisdiction upon subsistence options in an Alaskan villageBehnke, Steven R. January 1979 (has links)
No description available.
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"We have this land as our right" : ethnicity, politics, and land rights conflict at Enoosupukia, KenyaMatter, Scott January 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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The Ladejinsky model of agrarian reform : the Philippine experiencePutzel, James (James J.) January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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Salubrious settings and fortunate families : the making of Montreal's golden square mile, 1840-1895MacLeod, Roderick, 1961- January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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The Situational Context of Tenured Female Faculty in the Academy and the Impact of Critical Mass of Tenured Female Faculty on Pre-tenure Faculty Job Satisfaction: A Four Discipline StudyBouvier, Dianne L. 24 September 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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A Three-Year Weighted Application Blank Criterion Study to Predict TenureMitchell, J. Brooks 05 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this research was to develop an empirical model which could be used to predict job tenure for sewing machine operators in a large garment factory. Although the model did accurately predict tenure in each of five scoring ranges, the results did not meet the level of significance set forth in the hypothesis. It can be fairly stated that the results were trending in the right direction, but were not statistically significant.
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Factors that Influenced Homesteading and Land Abandonment in San Juan County, UtahFrost, Melvin J. 01 January 1960 (has links) (PDF)
Homesteading in San Juan County, Utah is for the most part, located on Sage Plain at elevations between 6,000 to 7,200 feet. Sage Plain is an undulating surface deeply dissected with canyons. The soil is relatively shallow and the predominant vegetation is pinyon, juniper, sage brush and blue-stem grass.The 52 year mean precipitation is 15.47 inches. Since the beginning of weather records there has been a noticeable decrease in the annual precipitation. There is generally sufficient moisture to mature winter wheat. Pinto beans are also grown in the more favorable locations.Principle factors that have influenced homesteading and land abandonment are: (1) availability of land, (2) transportation and isolation, (3) schools and cultural benefits, (4) wheat prices, (5) farming methods, (6) precipitation and (7) laws and government policies.The 80 years of land occupancy (1880 to 1960) are divided into 4 periods: (1) the early period (1880 to 1909), (2) the new dry-farm period (1910 to 1920), (3) the land abandonment period (1921 to 1937) and the period of new farming methods and land expansion (1938 to 1960).
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