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Privatization and access to housing: implications on equityCheung, Yam-man., 張任文. January 2000 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Urban Planning / Master / Master of Science in Urban Planning
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Privatisation and its impact on human rights : a case study of the Zambian privatisation programme, 1991-2001.Kongwa, Susan Lungowe. January 2006 (has links)
The study also provides an overview of the impact of privatisation on human rights. To
accomplish this objective, case studies of Zambia were undertaken within the concept of
the social and economic impacts, seeking to answer six basic research questions posed:
What were the objectives of the Zambian privatization programme? Was the privatization
process executed according to the provisions of the Zambian Privatization Act of 1992
and 1996? How is the outcome of the privatization process perceived by Zambians,
success or failure, what are some of the social and economic consequences of
privatisation programme? What are the human rights implications of the privatization
programme undertaken in Zambia?
Mainly qualitative data collecting methods, involving semi-structured interviews,
document analyses and direct observations of activities of the privatised companies were
employed, to answer these questions.
The study examines Zambia's background to privatisation, posits implications of
privatisation on the realization of human rights, looks at the case study of privatisation of
the ZCCM and the outcomes of privatisation. The study has been influenced by a number
of conflicting divestiture evaluation outcomes: for some the Zambian privatization
process represents a model programme, the 'most successful in Africa', which serves as
an example for other developing African countries to emulate whilst for others, it is a
"deeply flawed experience", resulting in negative social and economic consequences
which permitted the withdrawal of the provision of social services, massive human rights
violations and job losses. Based on evidence from these outcomes, the principal findings
from the study suggest that Zambia's privatisation programme has had both negative and
positive results. In reviewing the outcomes of the privatisation process, the intent is
neither to justify nor reject privatisation, but rather, on the basis of past experience, to
highlight key elements of outright failures and success and provide recommendations for
future use. / Thesis (LL.M.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Westville, 2006.
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Commodification of public housing in Hong Kong and its impacts on social fragmentationLee, Kwok-yu, Edward., 李國宇. January 1997 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Housing Management / Master / Master of Housing Management
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The dynamic of privatizing public housing in Hong Kong: benefiting the better-off at the expense of the poor?Lai, Hing-hong., 黎慶康. January 1997 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Housing Management / Master / Master of Housing Management
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An exploratory study on the housing needs of single elderly living in old urban slumCheung, Kar-yee, Regina., 張嘉懿. January 1997 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Social Work / Master / Master of Social Sciences
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Provoking the Rocks: A Study of Reality and Meaning on the Zambian Copperbelt.Parsons, Elizabeth C January 2007 (has links)
Even though the West, or Global North, initiates extensive development policymaking and project activity on the African continent, this study argues that one source of major frustration between different parties entrusted to do the work arises from cognitive differences in their worldviews. These differences affect people's actions and have theological ramifications involving how we all understand meaning and reality. The study employs a case method analyzed through the lens of Alfred Schutz's sociology of knowledge theories and augmented by insights from African scholars to look at basic perceptual differences between Zambians and expatriates working on the Copperbelt Province's mines. After exploring how participants in the study interpreted various experiences, this study concludes that Zambians and expatriates were essentially living in "parallel universes" of meaning regardless of their apparently shared activities and objectives. The study further argues that viewpoints expressed by Zambian participants can be extrapolated into powerful lessons for members of civil society who are concerned about international development and the environment. Such teaching elements could especially help reshape how Americans and other Westerners understand ourselves in relation to physical creation and the cosmos as well as to those from radically different cultures. Lessons learned from the Zambian perspective could also help reinvigorate Western theological thinking, providing much needed critiques of discourses that currently dominate international development policymaking and planning and that determine value principally according to economic strategies and fulfillment of efficient, measurable objectives. / Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2007.
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