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Is nutritional priority given to pregnant women? : a case study of intra-household food allocation among the rural poor in the Inchanga area, South Africa.Scott, Sarah Lynn. January 2009 (has links)
The premise of this case study research is that nutritional requirements increase when women fall pregnant and that obtaining adequate nutrition is of particular importance for the maternal environment and fetal growth on both short-term and long-term outcomes, impacting everything from individual well-being to Gross Domestic Product of a nation. Nutrition is a complex and multi-faceted area of study. An important part of this study is the nature of intra-household allocation. This study explores the allocation of food and resources within a sample of rural households to identify whether the onset of pregnancy changes a woman’s ability to claim (receive) additional food and resources to meet her increased nutritional needs. Using case study methodology, I collected a combination of quantitative and qualitative data on individual and household level information of 32 pregnant women in the area of Inchanga, South Africa. Almost all pregnant women in this sample report that their absolute needs are met. I also find that a majority of respondents report a relative increase in food, money and/or resources during pregnancy. This indicates that for the greater part of households in this sample, women’s access to nutrition does change because they are pregnant. Where a pregnant woman’s nutritional needs were not met, important individual and household correlates include the pregnant woman’s relationship to the head of household, to other household members as well as to the father of the child, in addition to the woman’s individual access to and control over income. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2009.
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Poverty alleviation in South Africa : can government fiscal expenditure on social services make a difference?January 2005 (has links)
This study examines how the South African government's expenditure on social services
impacts on the poverty levels in the country. To provide a background on poverty,
different concepts and views on the subject are reviewed and then the nature and
distribution of poverty in South Africa are discussed.
In post-apartheid South Africa, the thrust of macroeconomic framework and
corresponding policies implemented by the democratic government have been geared
towards poverty alleviation, employment creation and national output expansion
(economic growth). This study examines the trends in government expenditure on social
services and uses econometric analyses to further investigate the effects of government
spending on social services on the poverty levels in South Africa.
Economic growth and employment opportunities will have to exist and complement
fiscal redistribution to enable the poor lift themselves out of poverty in the long run.
Improved targeting methods that correctly identify the poor could also ensure that social
spending reaches the intended poor, thus narrowing the gap between macro policies and
the poor, and preventing a waste of resources.
Various poverty alleviation measures have been implemented, of which redistribution
through the budgetary policy is an important one. As part of its package towards
addressing the poverty problem, the post-apartheid government in South Africa has
consistently been injecting considerable amounts of resources on inter alia, education,
housing, welfare and health services. The initial results indicate that fiscal redistribution
on its own is inadequate in combating poverty in South Africa. Models that incorporate
economic growth and unemployment show that expenditure on social services do impact
on poverty alleviation, in particular expenditure on housing, education and welfare.
Further regression analyses show that poverty can be tackled through economic growth
and employment creation. In short, there cannot be significant fiscal redistribution unless
the South African economy registers high levels of economic growth and job creation. / Thesis (M.Comm.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2005.
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Assessing the role of civil society in poverty alleviation : a case study of Amathole District, (Eastern Cape)Ngumbela, Xolisile Gideon January 2015 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to conduct an assessment of the role of civil society organizations with regards to poverty alleviation. The study is conducted in Amathole District, Eastern Cape Province. The sample for the study is constituted by 3 civic society organizations (CSO), which are located in 3 local municipalities; namely, Amahlathi (Ikhwezi Women Support Center), Mbhashe (Nyhwara Home Base), and Mnquma (We Care Ministries) Local Municipalities. In terms of the data collection, semi-structured interviews were conducted with 14 officers from these civic society organizations. Concerning the research design, a combination of a qualitative and quantitative research approach was used. Concerning the findings of the study, the following points were noted: the different forms of interventions by civic society organizations, poverty eradication strategies, challenges that were experienced by civic society organizations, and the logical framework versus unexpected changes. It is probably safe to make mention that CSOs in the Eastern Cape portray a positive attitude and willingness to learn to manage the organizations better. The continuing support from the Department of Social Development will go a long way to assist the CSOs to become sustainable, in the context of management and efficient running of these organizations. The study thus concluded that specific benefactor-beneficiary dynamics are crucial for the success of any anti-poverty intervention. A greater need for the robust pro-poor social policy, availability of resources with which to translate it into action, and local entrepreneurial potential do not in themselves bring about success; they must operate in a certain way and be supported by certain principles and commitment for them to become powerful proper vehicle for alleviating poverty.
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Rich versus poor : discrepancies in perceptions of ANC and NP supporters towards the poor in South AfricaMamabolo, Nancy Matsie 04 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil)--Stellenbosch University, 2000. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Within the academic fraternity poverty has traditionally been treated and analysed as a
sociological concept. When poverty reaches critical proportions, its consequences
may, however, spill directly into the political sphere. The author contends that poverty
has become one of the major determinants of political debate in South Africa.
The NP government (which changed its name to NNP in 1998), which ruled South
Africa from 1948-1994 instituted apartheid, a policy, which gave priority to the
interests of whites to the detriment of blacks, coloureds and Indians. This resulted in
an unequal distribution of resources, and consequently also unequal social
development of South Africa's different population groups. As a result poverty is
concentrated in the non-whites groups, with blacks as a group being the worst
affected.
The aim of this assignment is to investigate the difference in attitudes between
supporters of the ANC and NP towards poverty and the poor in South Africa. In this
assignment the author proposes that ANC supporters have a better understanding of
the nature of poverty and more experience of poverty than NP supporters. She bases
her contention on the fact that the overwhelming majority of the ANC's supporters
come from the previously disadvantaged groups.
The finding of this study is that political party support is one of the major
determinants of perceptions that South Africans hold towards the poor. ANC
supporters seem optimistic about the future prospects of the poor, while NP
supporters seem to be more pessimistic. It must, however, be noted that in many
instances there seem to be a general trend that population groups in both parties have
the same response pattern (e.g. blacks will show the highest percentage in a response
to a question, followed by coloureds, Indians and then whites or vice versa). / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hoewel akademici armoede hoofsaaklik as sosiologiese konsep beskou, kan ekstreme
en wydverspreide gevalle van hierdie kondisie direkte implikasies vir die dag tot dag
politiek van 'n staat inhou. Die skrywer voer aan dat dit toenemed die geval binne die
Suid-Afrikaanse politieke konteks is. Inderdaad het dit een van dié vernaamste
dryfvere van openbare beleid geword.
Apartheid was die breinkind van die NP (sedert 1998 die NNP) wat Suid-Afrika van
1948 tot 1994 regeer het. Die toepassing van dié stelsel het bygedra tot die
sistematiese ontneming van die mees basiese regte van swart, bruin and Indiër Suid-
Afrikaners tot voordeel van hul wit landgenote. 'n Byproduk van hierdie beleid, was
die oneweredige verspreiding van hulpbronne wat oor 'n tydperk van byna vier
dekades bygedra het tot 'n grootskaalse ekonomiese ontmagtiging van die
bogenoemde groepe. Gevolglik is armoede vandag nog gekonsentreer binne die
bruin, Indiër, maar veral, die swart bevolkingsgroepe.
Die sentrale oogmerk van hierdie opdrag is om vas te stelof daar wesenlike
opinieverskille tussen ANC en NP ondersteuners oor die kwessie van armoede
bestaan. Die skrywer voer aan dat dit wel die geval is. Sy substansieër haar stelling
deur te verwys na die feit dat ten tye van die relevante meningsopname die ANC se
ondersteunerskorps hoofsaaklike uit swart Suid-Afrikaners bestaan het, terwyl dié van
die NP hoofsaaklik uit wit, bruin en Indiër ondersteuners bestaan het.
Haar bevindings bevestig dat party affiliase een van die primerê determinante van
Suid-Afrikaners se houding teenoor armoede is. ANC ondersteuners blyk meer
optimisties te wees oor die vooruitsigte van die armes as NP ondersteuners. Dit moet
egter genoem word dat In vergelyking tussen die responspatrone van spesifieke
bevolkingsgroepe 'n soortgelyke tendens binne die twee partye uitlig. In die meeste
gevalle sal die persentasies vir of teen 'n stelling in dieselfe volgorde (swart, bruin,
Indiër en wit) of omgekeer voorkom.
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Poverty and dependency in Cape Town : a sociological study of 3,300 dependents receiving assistance from the Cape Town General Board of AidWagner, O. J. M. (Oloff Jacobus Marais),1904- January 1936 (has links)
Thesis (D. Phil.)--University of Stellenbosch, 1936. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: no abstract available / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: geen opsomming beskikbaar nie
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The link between economic development programmes (RDP & GEAR) and poverty reduction : (Airport Valley as an illustrative case)Bayti, Thelma Thokozile January 2009 (has links)
The key debates after apartheid have been on the successes and shortcomings of the social and economic policies that were adopted after apartheid. The ANC government decided to approach poverty reduction by closing the inequality gap between racial groups in the country. It planned to provide services that would improve the poor people’s lives and also create employment to sustain development. To provide the necessary services, the government formulated two broad, but linked macroeconomic policies namely: the RDP and GEAR which focused on the demand and supply side respectively (Venter and Landsberg (2006). This indicated the importance with which the people’s welfare and growth were regarded by the South African government. It indicated that the government believed in pro-poor growth. The purpose of this study was to gain better and deeper understanding about poverty reduction since the 1994 political transition, from the poor people of Airport Valley (in the Nelson Mandela Metropolital Municipality), who experience poverty from the real world. The study attempted to find out from these people if there was improvement in their lives since democratisation. This qualitative and quantitative study used three methods of collecting data namely: a questionnaire, interviews and observation. The results of the study suggest that there has been lack of commitment by RDP and GEAR, as the conditions under which the people live and therefore their standard of living have not improved. The study recommends that the government should speed up the process of service delivery at Airport Valley and also include the people in decision making about the future of Airport Valley.
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The lived experiences of HIV-positive women in povertyMsengana, Sweetlener Thobeka January 2014 (has links)
The focus of this study was on the experiences of a small sample of local women who are HIVpositive and are living in poverty. The researcher was interested in exploring the psychological and social experiences of these women using Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis. This research aimed at giving these women a voice to express their first-hand, personal accounts of living with HIV in poverty. Data was analysed for meaningful units, which were interpreted inductively and hermeneutically, and categorised into super-ordinate themes. Six themes within the participants' experiences of living with HIV were determined, namely: (I) experiences of diagnosis, (2) disclosure experiences, (3) stigma, (4) ARV experiences, (5) experiences of social support and (6) poverty. This research found that after an HIV-positive diagnosis, most women experience a variety of emotional reactions. These reactions however seem to change overtime into positive acceptance of the HIV diagnosis. Most of the women in this study preferred to use partial disclosure than to fully disclose their HJV-positive status openly to families, friends and to their community. Reasons for not using full disclosure included fear of discrimination and stigma, which included a fear of being rejected or being blamed for their status and a fear of losing relationships. It was also evident from the findings that most of the women had experienced stigma directly and therefore partial disclosure was used as a coping mechanism to protect the self from further harm. It was also revealed that stigma not only has a negative impact on disclosure but also on social support and ARV experiences. Because ofHIV-related stigma, lack of social support was a struggle that almost all the women in this study had experienced. Lack of understandings about their medication also had a negative impact of the ARV experiences. Stigmas along with poverty are the major struggles that HIV -positive women have to deal with in their day to day living. The findings of this study reveal a need for further research in this experiential area as well as campaigns and education around issues such as stigma, medication, and emotional difficulties associated with HIV.
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Assessing household assets to understand vulnerability to HIV/Aids and climate change in the Eastern Cape, South Africa / Assessing household assets to understand vulnerability to HIV/Aids and climate change in the Eastern CapeStadler, Leigh Tessa January 2013 (has links)
Livelihood stressors in southern Africa, such as HIV/Aids and climate change, do not act in isolation but rather interact concurrently in complex socio-ecological systems with diverse, interrelated and compounded affects. Households experience differential vulnerability to such stressors based on contextual factors such as geographical location, income level and the gender and age of its members. Households’ differential experiences of vulnerability are further defined by the households’ use of their capital stocks: the human, social, natural, financial and physical capital available to the household to form livelihoods and resist the detrimental effects of a stressor. The capital stocks of 340 households were measured in two sites in the Eastern Cape, South Africa, using a household survey. These data were analysed to determine differences between the sites, households with heads of different gender and households of different income levels. Further data relating to the drivers and interactions of stressors over temporal and spatial scales, as well as the perceived value of various forms of capital by different social groups in the two sites, were collected via Participatory Learning and Action (PLA) methods including timelines, mental modelling and pair-wise ranking. Although the two sites have similar levels of income and fall within the same province, many significant differences emerged. The two sites showed different distributions of household head genders and different stressors and perceptions of vulnerability, perhaps owing to differences in their capital stocks, acting alongside the influence of culture and access on a shifting rural-urban continuum. These discrepancies further transpired to reflect crucial differential experiences along gender lines and income levels in each site. Vulnerability was often context specific, not only because of unique drivers of stress in different areas, but also because socio-economic groups and localities often had characteristics that could potentially exacerbate vulnerability, as well as characteristics that can potentially facilitate adaptive capacity. Stressors were found to have depleted multiple forms of capital over time, while new stressors were emerging, raising concerns over the most appropriate means of social protection within these contexts.
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Responses to the linked stressors of climate change and HIV/AIDS amongst vulnerable rural households in the Eastern Cape, South AfricaClarke, Caryn Lee January 2013 (has links)
Climate change and the HIV/AIDS epidemic are two of the most critical long-term global challenges, especially for Africa and even more so Southern Africa. There is great concern that the poor will be unable to adapt to the impacts of climate variability and change while HIV/AIDS will exacerbate the impacts of such stressors and deepen the insecurities of many communities already affected by this disease. Studies that consider the interlinked effects of climate change and HIV/AIDS along with other multiple stressors are increasingly needed. This study, located in two rural communities in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa, namely Lesseyton and Willowvale, assessed the responses of vulnerable households to the linked shocks and stressors of climate change and HIV/AIDS. This involved assessing, through household surveys, life history interviews and Participatory Learning and Action (PLA), the way in which multiple stressors interacted and affected vulnerable households, the way in which these households responded to and coped with such shocks and stressors, and the barriers which prevented them from coping and adapting effectively. Unemployment emerged as the dominant stress amongst households. The lack of development and having too few opportunities for employment has limited vulnerable households from being able to invest in assets, such as education or farming equipment. This, in combination with the impacts of increased food and water insecurity from recent drought, has created an extremely vulnerable environment for these households. They rely largely on two important safety-nets, namely social capital and the use of natural and cultivated resources; however the latter has been limited due to the impacts of water scarcity and an inability to farm. It was evident that there was little planned long-term adaptation amongst households and from government. Maladaptive short-term coping strategies, such numerous household members depending on one social grant and transactional sex, were too often relied upon, and although they may have helped relieve the stress of shocks momentarily, they did not provide for the long-term well-being of individuals and households. Poor communication and capacity between the different levels of government and between the government (especially at the local level) and the two rural communities has created an environment full of uncertainty and lacking in advocacy. Local government needs increased human, informational, and financial capacity and a clear delegation of responsibilities amongst the different departments in order for the two communities to benefit from the implementation of support strategies. There is also a great need for educational programmes and capacity development within the two rural communities, particularly based on improved coping and longer-term adaptation strategies in response to climate change in order for households to better prepare themselves for the future.
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