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The role of procedural laws in asset recovery: a roadmap for Tanzania researchMbagwa, Awamu Ahmada January 2014 (has links)
Magister Legum - LLM / Corruption is rampant in Tanzania. It is one of the major obstacles to the economic growth and sustainability of the country. The country loses a huge amount of money through corrupt practices. It is estimated that 20% of the national budget is lost to corruption annually. In recent years, Tanzania experienced grand corruption scandals which involved senior public officials and high political leaders. Between 2005 and 2006, 22 companies stole 133 billion Tanzanian shillings, the equivalent of$96 million, from the External Payment Arrears Account facility at the Central Bank of Tanzania. The discovery of this theft led to the investigation and prosecution of a number of perpetrators, including big businessmen and senior officers of the Central Bank of Tanzania. However, hitherto no assets have been traced and recovered from the offenders, save a handful of money which was paid back by a few perpetrators on condition that they would not be prosecuted. Furthermore, in 2008 a government minister by the name of Andrew Chenge was forced to resign after he allegedly was implicated in taking a bribe of $1 million from the British company, BAE Systems, in relation to a $40 million radar deal. Sources disclosed that Chenge deposited the alleged bribe money in one of his offshore accounts, but this money has not been recovered by the state. In response to the corruption problem, Tanzania enacted various anti-corruption laws. These laws include the Anti-Money Laundering Act (2006), the Prevention and Combating of Corruption Act (2007), the Proceeds of Crime Act (1991) and the National Prosecutions Service Act (2007). These laws contain provisions for the confiscation of proceeds of crime as one means of combating economic crimes. However, grand corruption persists in the country and only a few stolen assets have been confiscated to date. It is on this account that this study is exploring confiscation procedures in Tanzania.
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Profile of, and challenges experienced by, stroke patients admitted at Haydom Lutheran hospital, TanzaniaMaqway, Simon Azaria January 2012 (has links)
Magister Scientiae (Physiotherapy) - MSc(Physio) / Background and aim: Despite the high number of strokes globally, and among people of African origin in particular, there are few available data on stroke in most countries of sub-Saharan African (SSA), including Tanzania. In addition, the profile and challenges affecting stroke patients in these countries has not been adequately explored. The aim of this study was to determine the profile and explore the challenges experienced by stroke patients admitted at Haydom Lutheran Hospital in Tanzania. The objectives of the study were to determine the documented risk factors among the patients admitted to Haydom Lutheran Hospital, to identify the stroke on-set admission interval and length of hospital stay, to identify the process of physiotherapy for the stroke patients, and to explore the challenges experienced by stroke patients discharged from Haydom Lutheran Hospital, Tanzania. Methods: Qualitative and quantitative research designs were used to collect the data. The quantitative design used a retrospective descriptive study, in which medical records of stroke patients were reviewed. The qualitative approach included in-depth interviews to collect information regarding the challenges experienced by stroke patients residing in Haydom, Tanzania. Existing medical records were perused to obtain information related to demographic profile, medical characteristics and rehabilitation data among stroke patients admitted at Haydom Lutheran Hospital. Relevant data was captured on a data information sheet. The SPSS (14.0 version) and Microsoft Excel (2007) were used to analyse quantitative data. Descriptive Statistics were used to determine ranges, percentages, frequencies, means and standard deviations calculate. The qualitative interviews were transcribed verbatim and also translated from Kiswahili to English. Stated concepts were coded, grouped into categories, and reduced into sub-themes and main themes. Prior to conducting this study, final permission was obtained from the Senate Research Grant and Study Leave Committee at the University of the Western Cape as well as the relevant authorities of the Tanzania Ministry of Health, Tanzanian National Institute of Medical Research, and the Administration of Haydom Lutheran Hospital. Written informed consent were obtained from the participants prior to interviews. Results: A total number of 145 stroke patients were admitted to Haydom Hospital between 1st January 2004 and 31st December 2010. However, only 128 of the potential sample participants met the inclusion criteria for the sample. The mean age of the participants was 57.7years, (SD=18.673). Of these, 104 (81.2%) had haemorrhagic stroke and 24(18.7%) had ischemic strokes. HIV infection (78.1%), previous stroke (74.2%), smoking (58.5%) and hypertension (55.4%) were the most common risk factors for stroke. Among the participants, the documented impairments included emotional impairments 42(32.8%), speech impairment 47(36.7%), cognitive impairment 39(30.4%), muscle impairment 36(28.1%), and occurrence of coma 33(25.8%) respectively. The mean time from onset of stroke to admission was 1.2 days with (SD=0.42 days). The mean length of hospital stay was 12.16 days (SD=4.1 days), the majority (61.7%), started physiotherapy within 3 days after admission, mean duration of physiotherapy was 14.1 days (SD=5.79), and the mean number sessions of physiotherapy 3.7days (SD=18.8 days). The challenges that emerged during the qualitative interviews with participants were limitation in walking activities, inability to return to work and to participate in leisure activities as before the onset of stroke, and environmental factors such as physical barriers and attitude of family. Conclusion: The findings of the research reveal that stroke in Tanzanian patients occurs at a relatively young age, and that frequency of intra-cerebral haemorrhage is higher than that reported in developed countries. The clinical presentations and risk factors are similar to those in other studies. The qualitative findings revealed that the stroke patients had problems with limitation of activity, participation restrictions, and environmental challenges. They also expressed uncertainties as a result of a lack of knowledge about stroke and its effects, and discharge challenges relating to rehabilitation. These challenges should be addressed in the process of management of patients with stroke in the research setting.
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“Citizenship is what you are, what you do, and how you appear in Front of Other People in [the] Society you Live”: Lessons on Gendered Citizenship in a Tanzanian SchoolFerrao, Stephanie January 2016 (has links)
This case study examines how civics education and forces of schooling shape Tanzanian girls’ perceptions of citizenship. Girls often experience multiple barriers, including gender discrimination, when participating as young citizens. Gender concepts have been incorporated into the Tanzanian civics curriculum to raise awareness of gender inequality and champion gender empowerment strategies. To understand the effects of these gender-focused curricular inclusions on conceptions of female citizenship, this study provides an analysis of the framing of citizenship within the civics curriculum and an examination of individual student perceptions of citizenship. Data was collected from interviews, public diaries, and curriculum documents and analyzed using a feminist conceptual framework. The results provide insight into youth and gendered modes of citizenship participation.
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Kindheit und Bekehrung in Nord-Tansania: Aufsätze von Afrikanern aus dem ehemaligen Deutsch- Ostafrika vom Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts, Band 1Kiesel, Klaus-Peter 21 March 2019 (has links)
A first volume of essays by pupils of the Leipzig Mission's teachers' seminary in Marangu (northern Tanzania), 1912-1916. The essays, given here in the original Swahili and in German translation, cover the topics 'My Childhood' and 'How I WasConverted'. The authors came from Arusha, Machame, Masama, Meru and Siha.
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Social networks, bargaining power within couples, and maternal health care in TanzaniaMukong, Alfred Kechia January 2015 (has links)
Includes bibliographical references / This thesis focuses on the use of maternal health services and child health in Tanzania. The main focus is on how these issues relate to social networks and bargaining power within couples. These issues are interrelated and are discussed in three essays. The first essay investigates the impact of information externalities in social networks on the use of antenatal services. Particular emphasis is placed on the extent to which the probability of early antenatal check-up and antenatal completion are affected by social networks. Adopting an econometric technique that minimises the problem of omitted variable bias, the analysis suggests that these network effects increase the probability of antenatal care completion by an additional 6 to 35 percent, and may be as high as 59 percent. The study further finds that without adequate control of omitted variables, the network impact would be understated. It is also evident that failure to control for individual and household observable characteristics overstates the impact of networks. Results from the two approaches used in this study confirm that irrespective of the definition of social network, having a high quality contacts increase the probability of utilising maternal health services. The second essay examines the effect of bargaining power within couples on the probability of delivering in a health facility (public and private), as opposed to a home birth. It further investigates the effect of bargaining on the probability of health care provider choice at childbirth using a multinomial nested logit. Evidence suggests that cooperation within couples in decision-making, female discretion over household resources, and freedom from domestic violence increases the probability of childbirth in a facility, as opposed to home. The study finds that a woman's influence on service use varies if she is better educated than her partner. In addition, while cooperation in household decision and the incidence of domestic violence significantly affect private facility use, female discretion over household resources has a strong effect on public facility choice. Finally, antenatal completion, health knowledge, and maternal specific factors increase the probability of delivering in a public and private facility. ii The third essay empirically explores the contribution of intra-household bargaining, to the rural-urban gap in child nutrition. The study analyses the effect of parental bargaining indicators (cooperation in household decisions, the incidence domestic violence and discretion over household resources) on the probability of child stunting in both rural and urban areas. The essay contributes to the literature by demonstrating empirically that differences in intra-household bargaining increase the rural-urban gap in child health. It further contributes to the literature by correcting for possible sample selection bias. The results suggest that the significant effects of household bargaining indicators on child stunting in Tanzania are mainly from the rural and not the urban population. It provides evidence that weak bargaining power within couples in rural areas account for 5 percent of the rural-urban gap in child nutrition. The contribution reduces to 4 percent after correcting for sample selection bias. The results also suggest that failure to adequately correct for selection bias leads to a substantial underestimation of the overall rural-urban gap in child nutrition by 11 percent.
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The role of exchange rate in small open economies : the case of TanzaniaMtenga, Threza Louis January 2015 (has links)
Includes bibliographical references / This thesis addresses exchange rate behaviour in a de-facto partially dollarized economy. Over the past two decades the Tanzanian Shilling has been increasingly displaced by the United States dollar. This change has been prompted by instability of the local currency, and by the practices of foreign firms, which have used a dual pricing system at rates disadvantageous to the local currency. The implications of Tanzania's dollarization are traced through three related investigations: whether theTanzania Shilling to United States Dollar exchange rate overshoots, whether it has impacted the monetary transmission mechanism, and whether dollarization has substantively affected the pattern of Tanzania's foreign trade. The first study uses the Structural Vector Autoregression to test if the overshooting hypothesis holds for the TZS-USD exchange rate.The results suggest that foreign currency deposits are encouraged by the volatility of the exchange rate.In addition it is noted that the exchange rate demonstrates delayed overshooting, while a contractionary monetary policy leads to appreciation in the exchange rate for at least a year before returning to equilibrium. The determinants of the exchange rate in Tanzania are trade openness, real interest differentials, labour productivity and government expenditure. The second study uses a Bayesian Vector Autoregression to investigate the monetary transmission mechanism in the presence of dollarization. The results indicate that positive shocks on the interest rate contract money supply, which leads to lower output growth and inflation, while the exchange rate appreciates. The degree of dollarization also has a negative impact on the monetary supply of the local currency, as the central bank seeks to maintain a relatively constant rate of total money supply. This has the effect of lowering the inflation and interest rates, and is also associated with further depreciation of the exchange rate. The positive shock on the exchange rate (depreciation) is associated with an increase in dollarization.The aggregate demand shock fuels inflation and, in Tanzania's case, it has increased money supply, due to the persistent demand for real monetary balances. The third study uses a Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium to describe the conduct of monetary policy in a small, open, and partially dollarized Tanzanian economy. The structure of the model incorporates the expectations of agents and the dynamic relationships are explained in terms of structural representations that characterize the behaviour of the firm, household and central bank. The parameters in the model are estimated with Bayesian techniques, after it has been applied to Tanzanian data. The effects of individual shocks, including those that may be used to describe the conduct of monetary policy, are then considered. These simulations suggest that despite the existence of partial dollarization in the Tanzanian economy, monetary policy has important, short-term, real effects. The fourth study uses an Autoregressive Distributed Lag approach to investigate the short and long run exchange rate sensitivity of foreign trade. Principal components analysis is also used to reduce the dimension of the dataset. It finds evidence that the depreciation of the Shilling typically has an immediate positive impact on the trade balance, and exchange rate depreciation increases the trade balance in both the short and long run. However, exports show signs that support the J-curve hypothesis, though the associated parameters are not significant. Imports are not reduced by a rise in the Shilling, as traditional theory would suggest. This is ascribed to the country's de-facto partial dollarization. Since over 40 per cent of money supply arecurrently held in dollar denominated accounts, trade is largely immune to domestic currency fluctuations. This study also notesthat the use of foreign currency has tended to rise during periods of substantial economic growth. Although no causality is argued, this does suggest that the parallel use of foreign and domestic currencies is not detrimental to Tanzania's economic growth.
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Multidimensional Effects of anti-LGBTQI Discrimination. : A case study of Dar Es Salaam’s LGBTQI community; Lived realities of queerphobia in Tanzania.Burford, Adam January 2023 (has links)
‘The LGBTQ community is not sinful and criminal’ was a quote made by Pope Francis at the time of writing this paper on his sub-Saharan tour in Kinshasa (NPR, 2023), denouncing LGBTQI criminalisation as ‘unjust’. At present, 33 of the 68 countries globally who criminalise homosexuality are African (Varella, 2022). This is predominantly consequential to laws which came into legislation under European colonising powers. In many African states these exist until the present day with vague wording, such as ‘carnal knowledge against the order of nature’ (Reid, 2022), attempting to be justified on cultural and religious grounds. Looking at Tanzania’s case, which criminalises homosexuality with up to life prison sentences (Human Dignity Trust, 2019), this paper assesses the ramifications of multidimensional discrimination on LGBTQI citizens. Inspired by the United Nations ‘Leave no one behind’ campaign (UN, 2022), an analytical human security framework is utilised in conjunction with Galtung's conflict triangle (Dutta, 2022) and queer theory to assess the multidimensional effects of discrimination LGBTQI Tanzanians face. This research is undertaken using a bottom-up approach, focusing on the complexities and intricacies of discrimination from the LGBTQI perspective, through life story and open-ended interviews as well as ethnographic observation of the queer community and key informants working in organisations helping the marginalised LGBTQI community in Dar Es Salaam. A literature review justified this bottom-up methodology as a research gap presented itself insofar as this is an understudied and underrepresented demographic. Under the new presidency and with globalisation becoming more influential on societal mindsets this study aims to decipher between legislation and lived realities. Time constraints present a challenge limiting ethnographic findings, with delimitations presenting themselves in single language interviews due to translation restrictions. Findings enabled the community and organisation representatives to represent their perception of discrimination which were then analysed, to identify key areas requiring further research and development. This study aspires to contribute to knowledge in the field of LGBTQI inclusion in global development and human security in accordance with the SDGs of the Agenda 2030 (UN, 2018).
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Utbildar man en kvinna så utbildar man en hel nation – En studie av ett ”Montessori Training Centre” i TanzaniaAndersson, Josefine January 2009 (has links)
Syftet med uppsatsen är att sammanfatta Tanzanias utbildningssystem med särskild fokusering på kvinnors utbildningsmöjligheter, samt genom en etnografisk fältstudie vid ett ”Montessori Training Centre” i Tanzania presentera ett exempel på vad som konkret görs för att stärka flickors utbildningsmöjligheter. I uppsatsen presenteras resultatet av observationer, intervjuer och samtal rörande centrets uppbyggnad och funktion, kvinnors möjlighet till utbildning i landet samt tankar kring montessoripedagogiken. Slutligen lyfts vikten av gemensamma satsningar globalt, nationellt och individuellt för att utveckla jämställdhet mellan könen och skapa förutsättningar för ”utbildning för alla”. Här diskuteras även likheterna människor emellan och vikten av att belysa dessa, samt hur kvinnans nyckelfunktion i familjen i Tanzania skapar förutsättningar att sprida kunskap i samhället och att generera en mer utbildad befolkning överlag.
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Water Governance and Poverty: A Framework for AnalysisFranks, Tom R., Cleaver, Frances D. January 2007 (has links)
No / This paper engages with policy on meeting development goals for water through interventions, which promote good governance. Addressing an under-researched area, we propose a new analytical framework for understanding water governance, not as a set of abstract principles, but as interlinked processes with variable practical outcomes for poor people. The framework is informed by theories of governance, institutions and structuration, empirical research and field insights. We apply the framework to a case in south-western Tanzania, and we identify a range of issues for further research, particularly relating to water access for the poor.
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Media Freedom in Tanzania Today : A Qualitative Study on the Freedom of the Press Under President Samia Suluhu Hassan, 2021-2023.Holmén, Lycke January 2023 (has links)
No description available.
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