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A critical analysis of the Gqunube Green Ecovillage projectHolmes, Vaughan 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil (School of Public Management and Planning))--University of Stellenbosch, 2006. / The word ‘ecovillage’ is evocative of a kind of human settlement that exists in
complete harmony with nature and examples of such settlements are indeed in
existence almost everywhere in the world, some nearly half a century in the
making. The Gqunube Green Ecovillage near East London can hardly be
described as one of a proliferation of such settlements in South Africa, but it is
anticipated that an examination of that project will contribute to the limited
academic literature on the topic of sustainable human settlement.
In Chapter 1, this thesis introduces the Gqunube Green Ecovillage and, in the
following six chapters, traces its origins and demonstrates how models for ‘ideal’
human settlement developed. It explains how and why an international
ecovillage movement reached South Africa and how Reverend Roger Hudson
responded to that movement by starting the Gqunube Green Ecovillage in South
Africa. The conclusion is that Reverend Hudson has achieved his primary
objective, namely the establishment of an ecovillage, but the challenges
described in this thesis have been significant.
One of the most significant potential stumbling blocks to the future smooth
management of Gqunube Green is its own regulatory environment that dictates
the relationship between the settlers and their ecovillage. The proposed
sociocratic management style, combined with a strongly spiritual, eco-theological
objective, is driven by a strongly worded and rule-orientated ecovillage
constitution that is shown in Chapters 2 and 3 to have the potential to both
alienate and unite the inhabitants of the Gqunube Green Ecovillage – depending
on how it is interpreted and enforced.
The external regulatory environment, both enabling and restricting development,
is analysed in Chapter 4. National, provincial and local government legislation, policies and guidelines intersect to influence the progress of the Gqunube Green
Ecovillage, creating opportunity for controversy between conservationists and
developers. However, the debates between the various interest groups over the
appropriateness of various development options for the east bank of the Gonubie
Estuary were largely incidental and somewhat irrelevant to the delays in the
development of the Gqunube Green Ecovillage that are described in Chapter 5.
Although bureaucratic delays in the formal process of development have
restrained the full rollout of the ecovillage project, the Gqunube Green Ecovillage
was eventually established at the end of 2005 and the chronology leading to this
milestone is described in Chapter 5.
Chapter 6 of this thesis examines the timing of the Gqunube Green Ecovillage
project within a changing and enabling paradigm shift, enabled by cooperative
local government and efforts at the integration of legislation and policy to align
with the constitutional aims of sustainable development. The concept of an
ecovillage is not always acceptable to everyone as the ideal development model,
especially when big business has a stake. However, it has been argued that the
very fact that the establishment of an ecovillage has succeeded where big
business was about to establish itself is a victory in itself for the founders of the
Gqunube Green Ecovillage.
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Environmental impact assessment, integrated development planning and the pursuit of sustainable development in South Africa : a critical reflection on the consideration of alternativesGerber, Gerhard 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil (Sustainable Development Planning and Management))--University of Stellenbosch, 2009. / Despite our best planning and Environmental Impact Assessment (“EIA”) efforts we seem to be
failing in our pursuit of Sustainable Development. In South Africa we find ourselves confronted
with the harsh reality that after 14 years of democracy, more than a decade of compulsory EIA,
and 12 years of legislated Integrated Development Planning (“IDP”), poverty remains
widespread and persists alongside affluence, while inequalities are also growing. In addition
South Africa’s life-supporting ecosystems continue to deteriorate at an alarming rate. Critically
reflecting on what is going wrong, it is clear that there is an emergent consensus in the
discourse that points towards the inadequate consideration of alternatives.
A literature review of the historical development and social construction of the concept of
“sustainable development”; a theoretical analysis of sustainable development, planning and EIA;
as well as an analysis of the legislative and policy framework for EIA and IDP in South Africa,
shows that the consideration of alternatives is the “heart” and “soul” of EIA and IDP, and
therefore of the pursuit of sustainable development in South Africa. A content analysis of a
sample of EIAs and IDPs undertaken and produced in the Western Cape Province of South
Africa, however, indicates that alternatives are not being adequately considered during the
current practice of EIA and IDP in South Africa – resulting in only slightly less unsustainable
development and a perpetuation of the unsustainable and unjust “business-as-usual”
development types and patterns of the past.
EIA and IDP can never be, and were never supposed to be completely separate processes.
EIAs must be considered within the context to be provided by the sustainable development
vision, goals and objectives to be formulated in, and the desired spatial form and pattern of land
use to be reflected in an area’s IDP and Spatial Development Frameworks (“SDF”). Properly
informed Strategic Environmental Assessment based IDPs and SDFs, refined by Environmental
Management Frameworks, should therefore provide the strategic context and decision-making
framework for the consideration of need, desirability and alternatives; with the actual and
potential socio-economic and ecological impacts of a specific proposal to be considered during
the project-level EIA. Project-level EIAs in turn providing “feedback” to the planning processes to
ensure reflexivity and continued improvement. The improved integration and convergence of
IDP and EIA decision-making methodologies and practice are therefore paramount to the
adequate consideration of alternatives and the pursuit of sustainable development in South
Africa.
While the challenges to be addressed by EIA and IDP in South Africa are complex and ‘wicked’,
and the pursuit of sustainable development solutions is therefore also a complex and ongoing
process, the need for fundamental alternatives that will lead to drastic and urgent change for the
better are, however, just as real. The urgency and importance of the sustainable development
challenge for South Africa calls for bold decisions and the search for sustainable alternatives
that will deliver urgent and fundamental change for all South Africans. The practice of EIA and
IDP should be driven by these realities and reflect the need for urgent and fundamental change.
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An evaluation of the roles of CHE and the SETAs in the accreditation of NQF Level 5 learning programmesNxumalo, Edmund Linduyise 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPA (School of Public Management and Planning))--University of Stellenbosch, 2009. / The Further Education and Training (FET) and Higher Education and Training (HET)
bands in South Africa are characterised by major challenges resulting in the high rate of
unemployment in the country despite the promulgation of a plethora of transformative
pieces of legislation post-1994. These challenges include failure by post-matric
applicants to meet minimum university requirements for admission; unemployed
graduates; and tension within the higher education and Training (HET) band among
various quality assurance bodies and explicit mutual doubt about each other’s capacity
to perform quality assurance of HE learning programmes. In an endeavour to find
solutions to these problems, the researcher contemplated whether the cause could not
be the current system of quality assurance in South Africa. This perception has
dominated the current discourse on quality assurance, which has warranted a need for
research in this area to find concrete answers to the current problems, as well as
potential solutions.
In this study, the Council on Higher Education (CHE) and Sector Education and Training
Authorities (SETAs) are used as units of analysis to determine the veracity of the
arguments pervading the current quality assurance discourse that there are uneven
levels for quality and different and presumably inconsistent varying capacities for quality
assurance in the current education system.
The objective of the study was to test the veracity of this hypothesis for the purposes of
making recommendations informed by concrete and scientific empirical data.
The major findings of this study are that the South African Qualification Authority (SAQA)
policy, requiring CHE and the Higher Education Quality Committee (HEQC) to coordinate
the entire HET band, has not been implemented as envisaged. The degrees of
quality assurance and capacity for quality assurance in South Africa vary dramatically
between the SETAs and CHE and also among the SETAs when compared with one
another, and there is a lack of consistency and co-ordination at National Qualification
Framework (NQF) Level 5. Furthermore, the current legislative framework underpinning
the SETAs and CHE is fundamentally contradictory.
On the basis of these findings it is recommended that the current quality assurance and
accreditation system be overhauled by bringing about one council responsible for the
quality assurance and accreditation of all workplace and vocationally orientated learning
programmes in line with international best practices. CHE should concentrate on
learning programmes that are academically orientated. Lastly, the current legislative
framework governing the operations of SETAs and CHE should be amended.
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Principles for mainstreaming gender equality in the South African rural water services sectorRust, Urszula Anna 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil (Sustainable Development Planning and Management))--University of Stellenbosch, 2007. / Gender equality and access to basic water services are complexly interlinked objectives for both poverty alleviation and sustainable development. In South Africa, research shows that despite the emphasis on mainstreaming gender equality in the water services sector, (and the concomitant policies and structures) the lives of poor women in this sector are not substantively being transformed. This study was therefore aimed at deriving principles that would enhance the impact of gender mainstreaming in the water services sector, and at evaluating current South African guidelines according to these principles.
The study was qualitative in nature, and both theoretical and empirical information was used to derive the above principles. The initial literature survey indicated a need for a systemic approach to gender mainstreaming in the water services sector. Therefore, theoretical information was principally obtained from literature on poverty, sustainable development, complexity theory, feminism and governance. Empirical information was obtained from three sources, namely (1) participant observation of the meetings of the Strategic Advisory Group on Gender of the Water Services Sector Leadership Group (WSSLG), (2) individual interviews with a range of stakeholders, and (3) focus group interviews with community members involved in six water services projects – three each in the Eastern Cape and Mpumalanga Provinces.
The study resulted in a proposed framework of fourteen focus areas for gender mainstreaming in the water services sector. These focus areas, along with illustrative questions, are the following:
(1) Policy premises and formulation (Is the policy premised on equity and poverty alleviation?)
(2) Approach to gender mainstreaming (How is the 50/50 campaign being implemented?)
(3) The role of the gender officials (Is the gender focal point part of the strategic management team?)
(4) Co-operative governance (Are IDP officials and women’s organizations involved?)
(5) Public participation (Is the public participation process adequately resourced?)
(6) Advocacy and awareness raising (Do family gender relations feature in awareness raising initiatives?)
(7) Access to basic services (Are women specifically targeted in service provision?)
(8) HIV/AIDS and gender-based violence (What measures are in place to decrease the risk of disease?)
(9) Economic empowerment (Are the employment opportunities created sustainable?)
(10) Leadership by women (How is the leadership capacity of women being developed?)
(11) Capacity development of women (Is the training aimed at portable skills?)
(12) Project/programme management (What monitoring and evaluation processes are being used?)
(13) Environmental sustainability (What measures are in place to conserve water and reduce pollution?)
(14) Engaging with traditional culture (How are restrictive cultural traditions addressed?)
When the above framework was applied to the WSSLG Gender Mainstreaming Strategy and Action Plan (DWAF, 2005), the WSSLG strategy was in certain respects found to be non-responsive to the learning garnered in this study. Particularly, the WSSLG strategy neither adopts a poverty alleviation approach, nor addresses environmental sustainability and traditional culture. It also does not facilitate co-operative governance and programme management.
Finally, gender inequality in the water services sector impedes both poverty alleviation and sustainable development. Systemic solutions are required, and these study results might be germane to these.
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An analysis of organisational performance management in the City of Cape Town : from legislation to implementationJantjes, Anthea 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPA (School of Public Management and Planning))--Stellenbosch University, 2008. / Research was conducted in this paper on organisational performance management. Various definitions are offered in order to provide an explanation to the topic. Different models on performance management were discussed including the balanced scorecard. The City of Cape Town was identified as a case study to ascertain how the provisions for the performance management system, as stipulated in legislation, were implemented. The use of the balanced scorecard was also reviewed. Officials were interviewed, as well as various documentation considered, dealing with performance management in the City of Cape Town. From the findings various recommendations were made to improve the performance management system.
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An evaluation of a public-private partnership as an alternative delivery mechanism to enable the effective redistribution of land in KwaZulu-Natal : the case of Inkezo Land CompanyMadhanpall, Anwhar 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPA (School of Public Management and Planning))--University of Stellenbosch, 2008. / The dawn of a democratic South Africa in 1994 was seen as the beginning of a new era in South Africa.
Land Reform, as a matter of moral reconciliation, and within the context of rural development, was high on the agenda to be addressed by the new democratic ANC-led government.
Although South Africa’s history of systematic racial land dispossession is not unique; the extent of the dispossession, and racial nature of the dispossession gave a uniqueness to South Africa’s land history. In 1994 the racially skewed land ownership pattern reflected that 55 000 white commercial farmers owned 87 per cent of the land, yet the African majority of had access to 13 per cent of the marginal land.
The land reform imperative was restricted in approach by the compromise reached during the negotiations resulting in a transitional government for South Africa. In addition, the early 1990’s, was a period of increasing dominance of the neo-liberal ideology with its minimal state and minimal state intervention, and reliance on the free market principles informing interventions and programmes.
The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa enshrined private property rights protection; and whilst given recognition to the requirement of land reform it enshrined a market-led approach with enabling legislation and policy statements such as a “willing-buyer/willing-seller” requirements for redistribution and market related prices for land acquisition.
The Department of Land Affairs, a national government department, was tasked with the development and implementation of land redistribution. Therefore, despite the neo-liberal principles informing land reform, a state-led approach towards the actual implementation was embarked upon. In 1998 a target was set to be achieved within 5 years; which the Department failed dismally to reach. The target was then extended to be reached by 2014, and the thesis predicts that unless the delivery mechanism currently utilised for land redistribution is changed the target will not be reached by 2014.
The New Public Management paradigm, and various alternative delivery mechanisms have been considered, in addition to assessing the delivery mechanisms and approaches towards land reform in Brazil and the Philippines in an attempt to identify suitable delivery mechanisms for land reform in South Africa to enable it to achieve its target and objectives.
A detailed evaluation of an existing Public-Private Partnership, which exists to implement land redistribution was undertaken in terms of primary data collection and secondary data statistics. The evaluation assessed whether this delivery mechanism will enable targets to be met and land redistribution objectives in relation to rural development be achieved.
The thesis argues that the Public-Private Partnerships alternative delivery mechanism is a suitable vehicle to delivery land redistribution across agriculture commodities, with key recommendations on matters to address within the PPP mechanism.
For land reform to be implemented at the required scale and to achieve its developmental objectives innovation is required within partnership approaches and not a traditional bureaucratic-led approach.
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An analysis of the staff performance management system at the Gene Louw Traffic CollegeOliver, Patrick Andrew 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPA (School of Public Management and Planning))--Stellenbosch University, 2008. / The Staff Performance Management System (SPMS) was introduced and implemented in the public service at the start of the 2003/2004 financial year. Apart from being called to align with the Constitution and other relevant acts, it signalled a change in approach and philosophy to measure performance. One of the aims of this new system was to assist in communicating and reinforcing the organisation strategies, values and norms and to integrate individual and corporate objectives. It also aims to ensure that employees are evaluated in terms of a system that is fair, objective, transparent and which provides equitable rewards and recognition.
Prior to the implementation of the system it was envisaged that the SPMS should be a system that is characterised by the following:
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Managers/supervisors provide leadership and integrate performance with other aspects of their work by accepting primary responsibility to manage the people entrusted to them.
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Employees understand that their performance directly contribute to the ongoing success or the organisation.
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Individual employees have a full understanding of their work responsibilities and the standards of work expected of them.
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Individual employees receive regular and structured feedback on their performance.
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Valued performance is recognised and rewarded.
However, when the system was implemented no norms and standards were developed against which performance of staff at the Gene Louw Traffic College could be managed. The focal point of this study was to collect data on the current practices of the SPMS as implemented at the Gene Louw Traffic College in order to analyse the data and to identify possible challenges. The key question that stimulated this study is – How can the SPMS be improved to prevent low morale?
Recommendations are made regarding the proper implementation of the system, development of norms and standards, SPMS training and incentives in order to alleviate low morale and inefficient performance.
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Natural resources and conflict in Sudan : addressing environmental issues in a post-conflict situation : the case of AfghanistanCaas, Francois Henri 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil (Sustainable Development Planning and Management))--University of Stellenbosch, 2007. / Both Afghanistan and Sudan have experienced extended periods of war and violent conflict. Sudan has been engulfed in a nearly continuous and bitter civil war since independence in 1956. Afghanistan has been in a state of conflict since the Soviet invasion in 1979. Both nations are also among the poorest and least developed in the world. The article on Sudan addresses the interlinkages that exist between conflict and natural resources and how access to and unequal distribution of natural resources have triggered and fuelled violent conflict. In the case of Afghanistan, the article looks at the reasons for US military intervention in 2001 and analyses the reconstruction and development programmes devised by the international community in order to rebuild the country. Based on these, the article looks at the potential for creating a sustainable society in Afghanistan and putting in place an effective system of environmental governance.
Although it is recognised that both countries have managed to address some of the causes of conflict, the articles also state that in both cases, the agreements that were signed between the warring parties are far from being comprehensive. This is illustrated by the fact that in Afghanistan, conflict with the Taliban has increased dramatically in recent months, and in Sudan, by the still ongoing conflict in Darfur. It is argued that in both countries the potential for promoting long-term sustainable development is limited not unrelated, in large measure, to the nature of the development agendas being imposed by external decision-makers. Financial institutions and other international development actors have played an instrumental role in devising these agendas. They are promoting development strategies mostly based on neo-liberal policies and reliant on market forces, despite the fact that these policies have, in the past, often failed to trigger economic growth and alleviate poverty. Finally, while issues relating to the management of natural resources, particularly those of global and strategic importance, receive a fair amount of attention in the development plans, environmental protection as such, is often lacking political and financial commitment.
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Adressing the impact of structural fragmentation on aspects of the management and conservation of cultural heritageSibayi, Dumisani 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPA (School of Public Management and Planning))--University of Stellenbosch, 2009. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT:
The birth of democracy in South Africa launched a paradigm shift in the public
sector aligning it with the new political ideology. To meet this objective, state
organs had to be radically transformed to embrace this new political ideology
so as to extend and enhance service delivery to all South Africans. The
democratisation of state organs led to the transformation of public institutions
both statutory and non-statutory.
The urgency to transform strategic state institutions whose mandate was to
provide basic and primary needs like health, housing and social services, led
to the neglect of other like sport, culture, and the natural environment. The
transformation of some of the latter institutions was attended to only after a
couple of years after the democratisation. This led to flaws in these legislative
development processes which resulted in the creation of different institutions
by various laws. This was the root cause of fragmentation.
The provisions of these Acts are in some areas ambiguous and contradictory.
The consequences are duplications and overlaps in the implementation
processes. Heritage institutions have different regulatory frameworks and
management systems – regulations, policies, guidelines and procedures.
Furthermore, complex internal management systems expedite fragmentation
of this sector. This institutional fragmentation has enormous impact on
heritage conservation and management. There is limited cooperation and
collaboration between heritage institutions.
This study will outline how theories, strategies and instruments from the new
public management approach, can be utilised to address these challenges. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING:
Met die totstandkoming van ‘n demokratiese Suid-Afrika het in paradigma
verskuiwing in die openbare sektor gevolg wat dit in lyn gebring het met die
nuwe politieke ideologie. Om hierdie doelwit te bereik staats instelling moes
radikaal getransformeer word om hierdie nuwe politieke ideologie te
ondersteun en diens lewering na alle Suid-Afrikaners uit te brei. Die
demokratisering van staatsinstellings het tot die transformasie van beide
statutere en -nie statutere instellings gelei.
Die noodsaak om strategiese staatsinstellings wie se mandaat dit was om
basiese en primere dienste soos gesondheid, behuising en maatskaplike
dienste te verskaf en transformeer, het tot die verwaarlosing van sport,
kultuur en omgewingsake gelei. Dit het ‘n paar jaar geduur na
demokratisering voordat die transformasie van hierdie instellings aandag
gekry het. Die gevolg was ‘n gebrekkige wetgewende ontwikkelingsproses
wat tot die totstandkoming van verskillende instellings in terme van verskeie
wette gelei het. Hierdie is die bron van fragmentasie. Die voorskrifte van
hierdie wetgewing is in sekere areas dubbelsinnig en teenstrydig. Die gevolg
is duplikasie en oorvleuling in die implementeringsprosesse. Erfenis
oorvleueling instellings het verskillende regulatoriese raamwerke en
bestuurstelsels- regulasies, beleide, riglyne en prosedures. Verder vererger
die komplekse interne bestuurstelsels fragmentasie in die sektor. Die
institusionele fragmentasie het groot impak op erfenisbewaring en-bestuur.
Daar is beperkte samewerking tussen erfenis instellings.
Hierdie studies sal aandui hoe teoriee, strategie en instrumente van die nuwe
benadering tot openbare bestuur aangewend kan word om hierdie uitdagings
die hoof te bied.
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Participatory budgeting in the South African local government context : the case of the Mantsopa local municipality, Free State ProvinceLeduka, Moliehi 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPA (School of Public Management and Planning))--University of Stellenbosch, 2009. / This study was carried out to assess the extent of citizen participation in local government
decision-making, with focus on the local government budgeting processes. A framework of
participatory budgeting in Porto Alegre, Brazil is used to assess participation in budgeting in
the Mantsopa Local Municipality in the Free State Province with a view to drawing
appropriate lessons for South Africa as a whole. The research looks at three important
concepts in governance. The first is the issue of good governance. The second is citizen
participation and collaboration as cornerstones of good governance. The third is
participatory budgeting as an aspect of citizen participation and collaborative decisionmaking.
A multiple research approach was employed, which included the use of focus group
discussions, and interviews to examine the level of citizen participation in local government
decision-making process within the Mantsopa Municipality. Municipal documents and
records were used to analyse the existing situation within the municipality.
The research found out that the political and administrative elites are still holding on to
power that should be in the hands of citizens. Civil society groups are still being neglected in
local government decision-making. Citizens are also not being encouraged and mobilised to
take part in the budget process. The issue of racial discrimination in engaging citizens in
decision-making still exists. Mostly, the white business and farming community felt that
they were largely excluded from these processes.
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