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The role of housing associations in meeting housing needs and upgrading the socio-economic conditions of low-income people.Legodi, Tshepo Victor. January 1998 (has links)
The huge housing backlog that plagues South Africa requires concerted effort to develop capacity for low-income delivery systems that will improve the socioeconomic conditions of low-income people. Social housing, and housing associations in particular are recent housing delivery systems that promise to meet the needs of low-income people in South Africa. It is the intention of this research to investigate to what extent housing associations can improve housing delivery and improve the socio-economic conditions of low-income people. The literature review provides information on national experience in housing delivery. It investigates the difficulties of housing provision and how delivery fails to meet the needs of low-income people in South Africa. An international model of housing associations is used to provide an alternative form of delivery that may assist in reducing the backlog. The research uses integrated development as a framework for housing delivery. This paradigm advocates mixed landuse, and mixed income housing. Thus, it a move against 'housing in the veld" and 'one house one plot' delivery, and encourages housing delivery that is integrated with other functions within the inner city. Two examples of Johannesburg's inner city housing associations, namely Navarone and Jeppe Oval are used as case studies. These two case studies suit an integrated development approach. The survey includes a sample of 30 people from the two housing associations. Data analysis of the socio-economic issues and responses of tenants suggests that housing associations provide better living conditions and therefore a viable option for housing delivery in inner city areas of South Africa. / Thesis (M.Sc.U.R.P.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1998.
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Low-income inner-city housing as an option in the housing delivery process : a case study of the Albert Park and Point Road areas.Mfeya, Tabiso. January 1997 (has links)
No abstract available. / Thesis (M.Sc.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1997.
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An examination of factors threatening the function of small towns in an attempt to assess their future potential : the case of the footwear sector in Pietermaritzburg.Magewu, Noluthando. January 1996 (has links)
Some urban centres in KwaZulu -Natal are threatened with loss of function due to economic restructuring. Many studies argue that the problem of declining centres can be mediated by programmes of Local Economic Development. However it. is important to note that economic restructuring is a complex process that needs an understanding of broader economic processes as most of the problems are created by global forces that are outside the control of localities. The research aims to investigate the factors that underpin t he threat of function in an attempt to establish whether centres have a future potential. Directly linked to this is the level of awareness and readiness of development institutions to these changes, as this is important if they are going to make appropriate and strategic responses. Using the case of the manufacturing sector in Pietermaritzburg a twofold approach to the study was adopted. The f irst part examines the impact of restructuring on localities. vthis is used as a framework to interpret the threatened status of the ' manufacturing sector in Pietermaritzburg. The conclusion reached is that the footwear sector is threatened by global competition. The second part of the dissertation attempts to investigate how Pitermaritzburg-Msunduzi Transitional Local Council is responding to the challenge posed by economic restructuring. In this regard it is concluded that Pietermaritzburg's ability to respond appropriately is hampered by the problems within the local government. / Thesis (M.T.R.P.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1996.
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Rapid urban development and fragmentation in a post-apartheid era : the case of Ballito, South Africa, 1994 to 2007.Duminy, James William Andrew. January 2007 (has links)
Since 1994 a rapid rate of large-scale development in the region of Ballito, KwaZulu Natal, has generated significant urban spatial changes. This dissertation aimed to identify and examine the factors that have generated and sustained these changes. Qualitative information, sourced from interviews conducted with various professionals and actors involved in Ballito's recent development procedures, was utilized to this extent. The study focused on localised institutional, socio-economic, historical, physical/environmental, policy- and agency-based explanations of Ballito's spatial metamorphosis. It was found that the town's resulting pattern of spatial growth reflects tendencies towards urban fragmentation that have been observed in many South African and international urban contexts. Whilst forces of globalisation have played a role in driving the urban changes of Ballito, many localised and region-specific trends have influenced the development process in unobvious manners. In particular, issues relating to local government incapacity have served to undermine state planning initiatives, which take as their focus the reversal of apartheid's socio-developmental discrepancies. Likewise, incongruencies within the South African developmental policy position have served to create uncertainty in the local urban management arena. As a corollary of these trends, the interests of private-sector and central government institutions have assumed the position of greatest power within Ballito's urban process, to the neglect of local governmental and communal concerns. It is concluded that the representative capacity of local government and disenfranchised communities must be improved as a means of promoting the delivery of complex political concerns such as 'integrated' and 'sustainable' development. It is also suggested that urban analytical models involving institutional explanations of urban change are more effective in providing recommendations for the reversal of socio-spatial inequalities than traditional, economic-based analytical models. / Thesis (M.T.R.P.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2007.
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Revisiting current South African housing policy : towards the development of a holistic housing policy.De Waal, Shaun. January 1999 (has links)
What housing means to people, their satisfaction with what they have and their evaluation of housing, seems to be especially relevant at this point in time in South African history. Therefore using meaning as a factor to evaluate current policy in South Africa, seems an interesting proposition. Further it is useful to use this approach to consider what might be missing in current approaches to housing. Is it possible for instance, that in South Africa the approach evolved by policy makers is incomplete? Is it possible that a more comprehensive approach could be a solution to the current crises in housing? These questions led to the formulating of the research question that is the topic of this dissertation. The analysis of the problem and suggested solutions is dealt with in the following order: Firstly, the problem, definitions and research to be carried out is defined in Chapter One, which also defines the background to the formulating of the research question. This is followed by a review of the current South African situation and its relationship to international housing policies, in Chapter Two. Chapter Three, outlines holistic policies: what they embrace and their relevance to this subject. Thereafter in the same chapter, international, as well as South African attempts at envisioning more meaningful policies are examined, with reference to their implications for South African policy. Chapter Four outlines new research undertaken which examines the feasibility and amenability of South Africa to a more meaningful approach and finally in Chapter Five, a conclusion is reached. It is hoped that this approach, will add to the discussion in this field and contribute to new perspectives emerging. / Thesis (M.T.R.P.)-University of Natal, 1999.
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An enquiry into the use of activity corridors as a spatial strategy to restructure South African cities : a review and evaluation of activity corridor theory and practice, with reference to the Durban Municipal Area.Martens, Anton. January 2001 (has links)
No abstract available. / Thesis (M.T.R.P.)-University of Natal, Durban, 2001.
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The spatial structure of the urban fieldGreer-Wootten, Bryn. January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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Identifying a more appropriate role for the Canadian planning professionWitty, David Roy 11 1900 (has links)
Canadian planners face an uncertain future. The communities which planners serve are
experiencing significant change and seeking answers to the environmental, economic, and social
factors affecting them Planners have been disparaged publicly and in writing by prominent
popular writers, criticized by planning theorists, reproached by politicians and the public, and
challenged from within and outside the profession to explore new ways of addressing the issues
facing society. While planners have been caught up in those debates and issues, no one has asked
planners what they think about the future of their profession. This study examines the state of
Canadian planning^ asks practitioners what they think about their profession, and identifies the
factors which affect the work of planners.
The study is based upon a review of planning literature and a survey of Canadian planners. The
literature review examines others' -mainly planning theorists'- primary research to explore the
historic relationship between planners and city building and the influences of that relationship
upon modem planning thought and practice. The study also reviews the evolution of modem
planning theory and modern planning practice. The examination of the history and theory of
planning provides a context for the exploration of practitioners' views of the nature and status of
planning in Canada.
The focus of the study is an analysis of the views of Canadian practitioners on the current state of
planning. Five hundred and two questionnaires were sent to a random sample of members of the
Canadian Institute of Planners (CIP), representing 14% of the Provisional and Full members. One
hundred and tiiirty three or 27% of the sample responded. The results provide a detailed
understanding of what Canadian planners identify as the issues facing Canadian planning practice.
The study confirms that a majority of Canadian planners believe that planning practice is facing or
is in a state of crisis. They suggest that the crisis is caused by a number of factors such as the
political nature of planning decision-making, lack of public understanding of planning, and lack of
understanding of planning by politicians. Many planners feel that planning is compromised by the
politics of place and that, more and more, planning is facing conflicts of competing interests. In
the face of those pressures, planners believe that most planners have become agents of order
rather than agents of change. They suggest that the future of planning rests in identifying
appropriate new concepts of planning action. A large number also believe that there is a weak
linkage between the theory and practice of planning which threatens the well being of planning
practice. Building upon the findings of the survey and Len Gertler's 1994 challenge to the
Canadian Institute of Planners to identify a "more appropriate development model," the study
suggests that a "new development model" could reinvigorate Canadian planning and build
effective linkages between theory and practice.
The study suggests the evolving concepts of healthy communities and sustainable development
could provide a framework for such a model which could have a social reform and interventionist
approach to community-based action. The dissertation offers suggestions on the potential form of
the model and the role that the Canadian Institute of Planners could play in articulating it.
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Non-Design and the Non-Planned CityFontenot, Anthony 27 November 2013 (has links)
<p> This study seeks to understand the larger cultural context that gave rise to what is referred to as "non-design," a term designated to denote a particular aesthetic that is characterized by a suspicion of, and/or rejection of, "conscious" design, while embracing various phenomenon that emerge without "intention" or "deliberate human design." The study traces the phenomenon of "non-design" in British and American design culture of the postwar period. The author argues that following Friedrich von Hayek's theories of the "undesigned" nature of social institutions and his concept of a "spontaneous order" of the 1940s, non-design first emerged in design discourse and practice in the early 1950s in England, particularly in the work of certain members of the Independent Group, and by the mid-1960s it gained currency in the United States in the architectural and urban theories of Charles Moore, Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown, and particularly in Reyner Banham's writing on American urbanism. While rarely made explicit, this dissertation argues that the concept of non-design played an important role in design and urban debates of the postwar period.</p>
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Race for water resources among Beaufort / Jasper, SC and Effingham / Chatham, GA countiesKhan, Adil A. 05 June 2013 (has links)
<p> The municipal and public officials in Beaufort/Jasper, South Carolina (SC) and Effingham/Chatham, Georgia (GA) counties in the lower Savannah River Basin (LSRB) are faced with a dilemma of supplying potable water on an equitable basis to their communities from the surface and groundwater that has been partially polluted and/or is not sustainable. State regulatory agencies have implemented strategies to protect the regional water resources from further degradation of ecosystems, but these remedies are not addressing a crucial issue. The potable water issue is more critical than simply affecting to protect the local ecosystem. Hence, the thesis question is: </p><p> <b>Can current strategies, by the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (SCDHEC) and the Georgia Environmental Division (GAEPD), secure potable water sources from the lower Savannah River Basin in the region, potentially provide effective, efficient, and equitable results? </b> </p><p> Economic development and demographic changes have equally impacted the surface and groundwater. Groundwater was the primary source of potable water in predevelopment (prior to industrial revolution) and even post development era, but gradually became unsustainable. The alternative surface water source has also been polluted by the industrial and domestic wastewater treatment plant discharges. Surface water contains natural organic compounds, and even that has been overwhelmed by the added pollutants in wastewater treatment plant effluent. This has further increased formation of potential carcinogenic disinfection and disinfection byproducts in potable water. The carcinogen removal process has become expensive, but the potential risk for contamination remains problematic. </p><p> To answer the research question, interviews and surveys were conducted. The population for this research consists of municipal and public officials and water treatment professionals. The samples were selected due to their expertise and responsibility to supply safe drinking water to their communities. Collected data analyzed using Microsfot Excel to arrange in matrixes, and explained in simple narratives. The results were summarized and recommendations were made. </p><p> Most of the subjects agreed that water resources are not sustainable at current usage rate in the region. Groundwater is not sustainable and surface water quality has deteriorated due to organic pollutants in the industrial and domestic wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) effluents. The cost of producing safe drinking water from partially or potentially polluted surface water is higher than the cost of processing groundwater. The cost of desalination of seawater or brackish well water is even higher than ground or surface water treatment. </p><p> Seawater desalination is not a cost effective option now. However, conflicting interests regarding the switch over to seawater desalination as long as surface water treatment operating cost remains lower than the seawater desalination, surface water will remain a sustainable source. </p><p> Although seawater desalination is a more sustainable strategy to produce potable water in the Low Country Region. Surface water treatment is less expensive and in turn, local professionals view it as the best option. This I believe is a limited short term viewpoint, which does not address longterm sustainability issues. Efforts regulatory agencies and utilities, to produce safe drinking water from surface water will continue in the Lower Savannah River Basin (LSRB). </p>
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