Hooked on Gqom: an ethnographic study of a contemporary urban youth musical identity in South Africa
- Katushabe,Bathandwa Mathias Ngasiirwe
- Authors: Katushabe,Bathandwa Mathias Ngasiirwe
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Electric dance Music -- South Africa -- Durban , Kwaito Music -- Social Ascpects -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59326 , vital:62045
- Description: Gqom music has grown from being a relatively obscure sub-genre of South African Kwaito into a globally recognised sonic identity and social movement. Gqom, as a distinct music style, has featured heavily in mass media since 2015, spawning social phenomena such as viral dance challenges on various social media platforms, and constituting a launch pad for the careers of musicians such as DJ Lag and the Distruction Boyz. Gqom also featured in the international motion picture Black Panther in 2018, and in the 2019 Lion King: The Gift album by American pop icon Beyoncé. Although the origins of Gqom, its characteristics, impact, and ascension to noteworthiness have received attention in the form of newspaper articles, online blogs, YouTube documentaries, etc, and small treatises or academic articles, little literature has been generated about the music and its theoretical construction as sonic and social phenomena. I argue that by using the theoretical scaffolds of ‘identity politics’, specifically ‘identities in music’, one is better able to understand Gqom as reflective of a broader social urban youth identity characterised by partying and political disillusionment. In other words, I make the case for an intergroup identification that prioritises in-group musical identities associated with Gqom and its phenomenology of practices which I have excavated using an ethnographic qualitative method. , Thesis (MMus) -- Faculty of Humanities, School of Visual and performing Arts, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Hooked on Gqom: an ethnographic study of a contemporary urban youth musical identity in South Africa
- Authors: Katushabe,Bathandwa Mathias Ngasiirwe
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Electric dance Music -- South Africa -- Durban , Kwaito Music -- Social Ascpects -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59326 , vital:62045
- Description: Gqom music has grown from being a relatively obscure sub-genre of South African Kwaito into a globally recognised sonic identity and social movement. Gqom, as a distinct music style, has featured heavily in mass media since 2015, spawning social phenomena such as viral dance challenges on various social media platforms, and constituting a launch pad for the careers of musicians such as DJ Lag and the Distruction Boyz. Gqom also featured in the international motion picture Black Panther in 2018, and in the 2019 Lion King: The Gift album by American pop icon Beyoncé. Although the origins of Gqom, its characteristics, impact, and ascension to noteworthiness have received attention in the form of newspaper articles, online blogs, YouTube documentaries, etc, and small treatises or academic articles, little literature has been generated about the music and its theoretical construction as sonic and social phenomena. I argue that by using the theoretical scaffolds of ‘identity politics’, specifically ‘identities in music’, one is better able to understand Gqom as reflective of a broader social urban youth identity characterised by partying and political disillusionment. In other words, I make the case for an intergroup identification that prioritises in-group musical identities associated with Gqom and its phenomenology of practices which I have excavated using an ethnographic qualitative method. , Thesis (MMus) -- Faculty of Humanities, School of Visual and performing Arts, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Implementation framework for microgrids as an energy solution to uplift rural communities in the Eastern Cape
- Authors: Sibulelokuhle Xulaba
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Renewable energy sources -- Eastern Cape , Microgrids (Smart power grids) -- Eastern Cape
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60071 , vital:62916
- Description: People in remote areas of most developing countries still face economic and environmental challenges despite our more accessible world of technology. Access to reliable and sustainable electricity is the most challenging developmental issue faced by rural communities in South Africa, as grid expansion has dwindled due to business challenges experiences by the state power producer, Eskom. Unless businesses and homeowners in unconnected areas use generators, which are costly to run and environmentally unfriendly, most will continue to remain without electricity for the foreseeable future. The purpose of this study therefore is to provide a model for the successful implementation of renewable energy microgrids to overcome poverty and promote economic development in rural areas of the Eastern Cape. The data for the study was collected from three district municipalities in the rural areas of the Eastern Cape. The province is divided into homeland and farms, with the farms that were sampled for the study situated on State-owned land. The sample group comprised small businesses operating in these rural areas. The study used a mixed-method research design, the methodology being found to be the most suitable for the study. The study uses a questionnaire-variant convergent design that consisted of a mixture of open-ended and close-ended questions. The sample group was situated in areas with limited electricity or internet access, therefore face-toface structured interviews were conducted. Meta-inference was used for data interpretation, and a combination of quantitative and qualitative data analysis methods was used to analyse the data. For the open-ended questions, thematic analysis was used, whilst descriptive statistics were used for the closed-ended questions. The study found that most businesses operating in rural areas do not have access to electricity. Those businesses which do not have electricity must make use of diesel-powered generators to continue to trade, which makes their businesses unprofitable. They spend a large proportion of their earnings purchasing fuel to achieve the desire thermal comfort for their stock, or to pump water via boreholes or piped dam structures. The study showed that implementing a renewable energy microgrids provides a viable option, supporting the literature reviewed. This will promote economic development in these areas of the Eastern Cape. Developing and enhancing the standard of living can assist in reducing the number of people migrating to urban areas whilst providing an opportunity to increase farm yields, grow rural business and change the lives of the poor for the better. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Engineering, the Built Environment, and Technology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Sibulelokuhle Xulaba
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Renewable energy sources -- Eastern Cape , Microgrids (Smart power grids) -- Eastern Cape
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60071 , vital:62916
- Description: People in remote areas of most developing countries still face economic and environmental challenges despite our more accessible world of technology. Access to reliable and sustainable electricity is the most challenging developmental issue faced by rural communities in South Africa, as grid expansion has dwindled due to business challenges experiences by the state power producer, Eskom. Unless businesses and homeowners in unconnected areas use generators, which are costly to run and environmentally unfriendly, most will continue to remain without electricity for the foreseeable future. The purpose of this study therefore is to provide a model for the successful implementation of renewable energy microgrids to overcome poverty and promote economic development in rural areas of the Eastern Cape. The data for the study was collected from three district municipalities in the rural areas of the Eastern Cape. The province is divided into homeland and farms, with the farms that were sampled for the study situated on State-owned land. The sample group comprised small businesses operating in these rural areas. The study used a mixed-method research design, the methodology being found to be the most suitable for the study. The study uses a questionnaire-variant convergent design that consisted of a mixture of open-ended and close-ended questions. The sample group was situated in areas with limited electricity or internet access, therefore face-toface structured interviews were conducted. Meta-inference was used for data interpretation, and a combination of quantitative and qualitative data analysis methods was used to analyse the data. For the open-ended questions, thematic analysis was used, whilst descriptive statistics were used for the closed-ended questions. The study found that most businesses operating in rural areas do not have access to electricity. Those businesses which do not have electricity must make use of diesel-powered generators to continue to trade, which makes their businesses unprofitable. They spend a large proportion of their earnings purchasing fuel to achieve the desire thermal comfort for their stock, or to pump water via boreholes or piped dam structures. The study showed that implementing a renewable energy microgrids provides a viable option, supporting the literature reviewed. This will promote economic development in these areas of the Eastern Cape. Developing and enhancing the standard of living can assist in reducing the number of people migrating to urban areas whilst providing an opportunity to increase farm yields, grow rural business and change the lives of the poor for the better. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Engineering, the Built Environment, and Technology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Improving governance and service delivery in Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality: a quest for a clean audit opinion
- Ntsundwana, Kanyisa Zime Dadewabobonke
- Authors: Ntsundwana, Kanyisa Zime Dadewabobonke
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Service delivery -- Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality -- Port Elizabeth , Municipal finance--Auditing--Law and legislation
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59644 , vital:62297
- Description: The purpose of the study was to investigate how Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality (NMBMM) can improve its governance and service delivery to obtain a clean audit outcome. In addition, the study explored the role of auditing in the functioning and performance of municipalities. NMBMM public officials and political office-bearers are expected in terms of Chapter 7 of the Constitution of South Africa Act 108 of 1996 to promote the general welfare of the community by meeting its needs, expectations and demands. The qualitative (non-empirical) research methodology followed in the study was based on a desktop approach. The annual documents reviewed to answer the research objectives were the Consolidated General Reports on the Local Government Audit Outcome and the Reports of the Auditor-General to the Eastern Cape Provincial Legislature and the council on the NMBMM and its municipal entity for the financial period 2015/2016 to 2019/2020. The problem was that the NMBMM did not obtain a clean audit opinion during this period. The study findings indicated that the main contributing factors that prevented the NMBMM from improving governance, service delivery and obtaining a clean audit outcome were as follows: poor management of accounting practices (financial management); inadequate financial statements and performance reports; a lack of adherence to predetermined objectives and legislation; and unauthorised, fruitless, wasteful and irregular expenditure. To attain a clean audit outcome, NMBMM municipal officials and political officebearers need to perform their mandated duties diligently and overcome the challenges that have barred them from obtaining an unqualified audit opinion. Such an endeavour would be consistent with the Operation Clean Audit (OPCA) campaign, which was introduced by the former Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs, Sicelo Shiceka, in 2009. In other words, the NMBMM must improve its governance and service delivery because a municipality without good governance lacks accountability, which has a direct negative impact on the delivery of services to its communities. Hence, it is recommended inter alia that the NMBMM seeks advice from iii the Auditor-General on strategies to improve its audit outcomes, maintains infrastructure, addresses criminal activities and improves its internal controls. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Humanities, School of Governmental and Social sciences, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Ntsundwana, Kanyisa Zime Dadewabobonke
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Service delivery -- Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality -- Port Elizabeth , Municipal finance--Auditing--Law and legislation
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59644 , vital:62297
- Description: The purpose of the study was to investigate how Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality (NMBMM) can improve its governance and service delivery to obtain a clean audit outcome. In addition, the study explored the role of auditing in the functioning and performance of municipalities. NMBMM public officials and political office-bearers are expected in terms of Chapter 7 of the Constitution of South Africa Act 108 of 1996 to promote the general welfare of the community by meeting its needs, expectations and demands. The qualitative (non-empirical) research methodology followed in the study was based on a desktop approach. The annual documents reviewed to answer the research objectives were the Consolidated General Reports on the Local Government Audit Outcome and the Reports of the Auditor-General to the Eastern Cape Provincial Legislature and the council on the NMBMM and its municipal entity for the financial period 2015/2016 to 2019/2020. The problem was that the NMBMM did not obtain a clean audit opinion during this period. The study findings indicated that the main contributing factors that prevented the NMBMM from improving governance, service delivery and obtaining a clean audit outcome were as follows: poor management of accounting practices (financial management); inadequate financial statements and performance reports; a lack of adherence to predetermined objectives and legislation; and unauthorised, fruitless, wasteful and irregular expenditure. To attain a clean audit outcome, NMBMM municipal officials and political officebearers need to perform their mandated duties diligently and overcome the challenges that have barred them from obtaining an unqualified audit opinion. Such an endeavour would be consistent with the Operation Clean Audit (OPCA) campaign, which was introduced by the former Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs, Sicelo Shiceka, in 2009. In other words, the NMBMM must improve its governance and service delivery because a municipality without good governance lacks accountability, which has a direct negative impact on the delivery of services to its communities. Hence, it is recommended inter alia that the NMBMM seeks advice from iii the Auditor-General on strategies to improve its audit outcomes, maintains infrastructure, addresses criminal activities and improves its internal controls. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Humanities, School of Governmental and Social sciences, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
In vitro evaluation of vernonia amygdalina gold nanoparticles to stimulate apoptosis in breast cancer lines
- Authors: Pali, Zenande
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Breast--Cancer--Treatment--Technological innovations , Apoptosis -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59933 , vital:62696
- Description: Breast cancer is the most prevalent cancer in women and triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is one of the most aggressive breast cancer subtypes. Current breast cancer therapies are associated with several side effects and less effective treatment. Therefore, the development of new approaches to improve cancer treatment are needed. The use of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) for anti-cancer effects is one of the most promising research areas in the field of nanotechnology, because nanoparticles are readily functionalized and can passively accumulate at the tumor site without affecting healthy tissues. The green synthesis of AuNPs is an eco-friendly, costeffective, fast, and non-toxic method that is associated with fewer side effects.The aim of this study was to evaluate the cytotoxicity and apoptotic activity exhibted by Vernonia amygdalina gold nanoparticles (VA-AuNPs) in triple negative breast cancer cell lines. The aqueous extract of Vernonia amygdalina was used to reduce gold salts to form VA-AuNPs. The VA-AuNPs were synthesised at a temperature of 100 °C and pH 7. The synthesised green AuNPs were charactised using ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering, and high resolution transmission electron microscopy. Spherical VA-AuNPs were succesfully synthesized with average size of 17.11 ± 2.82 nm and a zeta potential of -36.55 ± 1.15 mV. The MTT assay revealed that VA-AuNPs significantly reduced (p cell viability for both mouse (E0771) and human (MDA-MB231) TNBC cell lines in a dose-dependent manner. The PrestoBlue assay showed a consistent decrease in cell numbers over time, suggesting either a decrease in proliferation or increase in apoptosis. The apoptotic effects of VAAuNPs were assessed using the CaspGLOW Fluorescein active caspase-8 staining kit. It indicated that caspase 8 was activated when cells were treated with VA-AuNPs. E0771 and MDA-MB231 cells were compared when treated with VA-AuNP and a similar trend was established. The HRTEM image showed VA-AuNPs in an vesiclelike structure inside the cell. It can be concluded that the VA-AuNPs showed anticancer activities against TNBC cells. Caspase 8 is activated by VA-AuNPs, confirming the induction of apoptosis, but does not exclude the activation of the intrinsic apoptotic pathway or inhibition of proliferation activity. E0771 and MDA-MB231 cells showed similar cytotoxic activity and thus expected that the mechanism of action in these cell lines should also be similar. Future in vivo research, using the mouse model inoculated with E0771 TNBC cells, should be justified and comparable with human TNBC cells. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, School of Biomolecular and Chemical Sciences, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Pali, Zenande
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Breast--Cancer--Treatment--Technological innovations , Apoptosis -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59933 , vital:62696
- Description: Breast cancer is the most prevalent cancer in women and triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is one of the most aggressive breast cancer subtypes. Current breast cancer therapies are associated with several side effects and less effective treatment. Therefore, the development of new approaches to improve cancer treatment are needed. The use of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) for anti-cancer effects is one of the most promising research areas in the field of nanotechnology, because nanoparticles are readily functionalized and can passively accumulate at the tumor site without affecting healthy tissues. The green synthesis of AuNPs is an eco-friendly, costeffective, fast, and non-toxic method that is associated with fewer side effects.The aim of this study was to evaluate the cytotoxicity and apoptotic activity exhibted by Vernonia amygdalina gold nanoparticles (VA-AuNPs) in triple negative breast cancer cell lines. The aqueous extract of Vernonia amygdalina was used to reduce gold salts to form VA-AuNPs. The VA-AuNPs were synthesised at a temperature of 100 °C and pH 7. The synthesised green AuNPs were charactised using ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy, dynamic light scattering, and high resolution transmission electron microscopy. Spherical VA-AuNPs were succesfully synthesized with average size of 17.11 ± 2.82 nm and a zeta potential of -36.55 ± 1.15 mV. The MTT assay revealed that VA-AuNPs significantly reduced (p cell viability for both mouse (E0771) and human (MDA-MB231) TNBC cell lines in a dose-dependent manner. The PrestoBlue assay showed a consistent decrease in cell numbers over time, suggesting either a decrease in proliferation or increase in apoptosis. The apoptotic effects of VAAuNPs were assessed using the CaspGLOW Fluorescein active caspase-8 staining kit. It indicated that caspase 8 was activated when cells were treated with VA-AuNPs. E0771 and MDA-MB231 cells were compared when treated with VA-AuNP and a similar trend was established. The HRTEM image showed VA-AuNPs in an vesiclelike structure inside the cell. It can be concluded that the VA-AuNPs showed anticancer activities against TNBC cells. Caspase 8 is activated by VA-AuNPs, confirming the induction of apoptosis, but does not exclude the activation of the intrinsic apoptotic pathway or inhibition of proliferation activity. E0771 and MDA-MB231 cells showed similar cytotoxic activity and thus expected that the mechanism of action in these cell lines should also be similar. Future in vivo research, using the mouse model inoculated with E0771 TNBC cells, should be justified and comparable with human TNBC cells. , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, School of Biomolecular and Chemical Sciences, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Infant feeding practices of mothers with infants under six months of age in the Nelson Mandela Bay Community Health Centres within Sub-district C
- Authors: Moss, Caryn Ruth
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Breastfeeding , Breastfeeding -- Complications
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60177 , vital:63212
- Description: Background: Infant feeding practices refers to the type of feeding methods that are used to provide nutrition to the infant. This includes breastfeeding, donor milk, formula milk, and complementary feeds. Globally, breastfeeding is the recommended infant feeding practice for infants under six months of age with the introduction of complementary feeds after six months of age (WHO, 2018a). The purpose of the study was to explore and describe the infant feeding practices of mothers with infants under six months of age in Nelson Mandela Bay. The researcher explored and described the different infant feeding practices of mothers with infants under six months of age. Method: A quantitative, descriptive study design was conducted and included 150 respondents, 18 years old and above, with infants under six months of age. Convenience sampling was used, and the respondents were from five Nelson Mandela Bay Community Health Centres (CHCs) in Sub-district C. Data were collected using a fieldworker employing a mask-to-mask approach to adhere to COVID-19 principles and a questionnaire with open-ended and closed-ended questions. Data were analysed using the statistical package for the social sciences (SPSS®) software with the use of descriptive statistical analysis. Results: The results revealed that 63% (n=94) of the respondents had breastfed their infant while 37% (n=56) had never breastfed their infant. Most of the respondents, 85% (n=128) recorded that they received advice after birth. Of the respondents, 37% (n=56), gave their infant formula milk instead of breastfeeding. In addition, 33% (n=29) of the infants were given soft foods at two months old as well as 32% (n=32.3) were given liquids at the same age. Conclusion: The study findings revealed that most mothers with infants under six months of age in the Nelson Mandela Bay CHCs Sub-district C introduced complementary feeds before their infants turned six months old. The results also revealed that respondents introduced complementary feeds because the infant was still hungry. Family members, friends, and healthcare practitioners play an important role when a mother chooses a feeding practice for her infant. Recommendations are made to mothers to provide age-appropriate feeding practices. Furthermore, viii recommendations are made to nurse educators to include training regarding up-to-date infant feeding practices to undergraduate nursing students. Lastly, it is recommended that research comparing infant feeding practices in the three Sub-districts in Nelson Mandela Bay be conducted. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Health Sciences, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Moss, Caryn Ruth
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Breastfeeding , Breastfeeding -- Complications
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60177 , vital:63212
- Description: Background: Infant feeding practices refers to the type of feeding methods that are used to provide nutrition to the infant. This includes breastfeeding, donor milk, formula milk, and complementary feeds. Globally, breastfeeding is the recommended infant feeding practice for infants under six months of age with the introduction of complementary feeds after six months of age (WHO, 2018a). The purpose of the study was to explore and describe the infant feeding practices of mothers with infants under six months of age in Nelson Mandela Bay. The researcher explored and described the different infant feeding practices of mothers with infants under six months of age. Method: A quantitative, descriptive study design was conducted and included 150 respondents, 18 years old and above, with infants under six months of age. Convenience sampling was used, and the respondents were from five Nelson Mandela Bay Community Health Centres (CHCs) in Sub-district C. Data were collected using a fieldworker employing a mask-to-mask approach to adhere to COVID-19 principles and a questionnaire with open-ended and closed-ended questions. Data were analysed using the statistical package for the social sciences (SPSS®) software with the use of descriptive statistical analysis. Results: The results revealed that 63% (n=94) of the respondents had breastfed their infant while 37% (n=56) had never breastfed their infant. Most of the respondents, 85% (n=128) recorded that they received advice after birth. Of the respondents, 37% (n=56), gave their infant formula milk instead of breastfeeding. In addition, 33% (n=29) of the infants were given soft foods at two months old as well as 32% (n=32.3) were given liquids at the same age. Conclusion: The study findings revealed that most mothers with infants under six months of age in the Nelson Mandela Bay CHCs Sub-district C introduced complementary feeds before their infants turned six months old. The results also revealed that respondents introduced complementary feeds because the infant was still hungry. Family members, friends, and healthcare practitioners play an important role when a mother chooses a feeding practice for her infant. Recommendations are made to mothers to provide age-appropriate feeding practices. Furthermore, viii recommendations are made to nurse educators to include training regarding up-to-date infant feeding practices to undergraduate nursing students. Lastly, it is recommended that research comparing infant feeding practices in the three Sub-districts in Nelson Mandela Bay be conducted. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Health Sciences, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Infrastructure development: A framework for successful delivery of tower masts
- Authors: Wana, Sivuyise Viwe
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: telecommunication , Mobile network
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60060 , vital:62870
- Description: In the South African context, the demand for network connectivity as a basic human right has increased (BusinessTech, 2022). In urban areas with functioning telecommunication network coverage the demand has heightened while there is also significant growth in the demand for network connectivity in remote and rural areas such as villages, small towns, as well as peri-urban areas. The rising demand for network coverage as well as the initiative to recognise network coverage as a basic human right prompted the South African government to put a plan in place for the supply of free internet data to low-income households (BusinessTech, 2022). The main aim of the study was to investigate the need for the construction, upgrade, and installation of telecommunications tower mast infrastructure in areas of the Eastern Cape that have a great need for the services. This was achieved by analysing the various requirements and challenges that technical teams are faced with within the telecommunications sector, and in doing so, the study aimed to understand the ways in which the infrastructure gap among different socio-economic groups in the country may be closed. The findings of the study suggest that, although there is a demand for construction of new tower mast infrastructure, there is a greater need for improving the existing infrastructure. It is recommended that this may be done through initiatives aimed at protecting the existing infrastructure against vandals, ensuring rural communities are assisted in the use of funds obtained from the leasing of land, there are more stringent consequence management processes in place for individuals who mismanage resources obtained from tower mast infrastructure, and that infrastructure sharing and the upgrade of existing infrastructure is the best alternative in increasing network coverage for rural areas. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Engineering, the Built Environment, and Technology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Wana, Sivuyise Viwe
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: telecommunication , Mobile network
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60060 , vital:62870
- Description: In the South African context, the demand for network connectivity as a basic human right has increased (BusinessTech, 2022). In urban areas with functioning telecommunication network coverage the demand has heightened while there is also significant growth in the demand for network connectivity in remote and rural areas such as villages, small towns, as well as peri-urban areas. The rising demand for network coverage as well as the initiative to recognise network coverage as a basic human right prompted the South African government to put a plan in place for the supply of free internet data to low-income households (BusinessTech, 2022). The main aim of the study was to investigate the need for the construction, upgrade, and installation of telecommunications tower mast infrastructure in areas of the Eastern Cape that have a great need for the services. This was achieved by analysing the various requirements and challenges that technical teams are faced with within the telecommunications sector, and in doing so, the study aimed to understand the ways in which the infrastructure gap among different socio-economic groups in the country may be closed. The findings of the study suggest that, although there is a demand for construction of new tower mast infrastructure, there is a greater need for improving the existing infrastructure. It is recommended that this may be done through initiatives aimed at protecting the existing infrastructure against vandals, ensuring rural communities are assisted in the use of funds obtained from the leasing of land, there are more stringent consequence management processes in place for individuals who mismanage resources obtained from tower mast infrastructure, and that infrastructure sharing and the upgrade of existing infrastructure is the best alternative in increasing network coverage for rural areas. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Engineering, the Built Environment, and Technology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Inventory management decisions for effective inventory management in the South African automotive component manufacturing industry: pre-and since COVID-19
- Authors: Delport, Jason
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Inventory management , Automobile industry and trade
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , Theses
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59511 , vital:62145
- Description: Globalisation has enabled the automotive industry to source various automotive products worldwide. It assisted in increasing the economic growth of countries as it allowed the flow of goods and capital between countries and created many employment opportunities locally. Emerging markets, especially Africa, forms a pivotal part of the global automotive industry. The South African automotive industry as the largest manufacturing and third largest economic sector in South Africa, has been acknowledged by government as a prime source of economic growth. The South African manufacturing businesses, in particular the automotive component manufactures (ACMs) are reliant on inventory for automotive manufacturing. In 2019, the world was hit by the Coronavirus virus outbreak known as COVID-19, which became a global health pandemic that significantly affected the global economy. The pandemic and lockdown measures implemented, seriously affected the automotive industry, in particular inventory management as it led to raw materials inventory shortages due to delivery delays. Therefore, the primary objective of this study was to investigate the inventory management decisions influencing effective inventory management in the South African automotive component manufacturing (SAACM) industry prior to Covid-19 and whether and how it changed since the Covid-19 pandemic. The comprehensive literature review identified four inventory management decisions as independent variables (inventory forecasting, inventory storage, inventory control and inventory staff capabilities management) and effective inventory management as the dependent variable in the proposed hypothesised model. The model was tested to establish the influence of the identified four inventory management decisions on effective inventory management in ACMs prior to Covid-19 and then again since Covid-19. A quantitative research approach was followed to collect data required for the hypothesis testing. Nonprobability sampling in particular judgemental sampling was utilised for this study by selecting respondents employed by ACMs in South Africa as logistics managers, supply chain managers, production supervisors, master production schedulers, cycle count operators and warehouse staff. A selfadministered internet-based questionnaire was used to obtain the data from the target sample comprising 200 respondents, of which 162 were usable for further statistical analysis. Data was analysed first for prior to and then for since Covid-19 using Statistica Version 14 computer software. Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) was used to extract the variables and validate the measuring instrument. The Cronbach's alpha values for reliability were confirmed for each of the variables identified in the two sets of EFAs. All four independent variables (inventory v management decisions) and the dependent variable (effective inventory management) for prior to as well as since Covid-19 were found to be valid and reliable and retained for further analyses. The results of the Pearson product moment correlation coefficients reported mostly weak and moderate associations between variables for both prior to and since Covid-19. The results of the multiple regression analysis (MRA) for prior to Covid-19 found four statistically significant relationships between the four independent variables - inventory forecasting management, inventory storage management, inventory control management and inventory staff capabilities management and the dependent variable effective inventory management. The results of the MRA for since Covid-19 found two statistically significant relationships between two independent variables inventory forecasting management and inventory resource management and the dependent variable effective inventory management. The tested hypothesised model provides a framework for further testing in future ACM inventory management studies in other countries. Business managers and inventory management staff of global ACMs can use it as a guide for effective inventory management; on which specific inventory management decisions to always pay attention to and, which inventory management decisions to pay attention to when a long-lasting pandemic occurs such as Covid-19. It is recommended that regardless of the Covid-19 pandemic, inventory managers in ACMs in South Africa should consider inventory forecasting management methods such as demand forecasting, determining the economic order quantity (EOQ) for all inventory item orders and materials requirement planning (MRP). They should also use an inventory information sharing system and inventory replenishment procedure to ensure inventory is managed effectively. During a prolonged pandemic such as Covid-19, inventory managers in ACMs in South Africa should pay particular attention to inventory resource management specifically regarding re-order inventory levels and classifying all inventory items according to the importance of using ABC analysis. They should further offer employees inventory training to remain abreast of new inventory developments in the industry and for career advancement. , Thesis (MCom) -- Faculty of Business and Economics Science, School of Applied Accounting, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Delport, Jason
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Inventory management , Automobile industry and trade
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , Theses
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59511 , vital:62145
- Description: Globalisation has enabled the automotive industry to source various automotive products worldwide. It assisted in increasing the economic growth of countries as it allowed the flow of goods and capital between countries and created many employment opportunities locally. Emerging markets, especially Africa, forms a pivotal part of the global automotive industry. The South African automotive industry as the largest manufacturing and third largest economic sector in South Africa, has been acknowledged by government as a prime source of economic growth. The South African manufacturing businesses, in particular the automotive component manufactures (ACMs) are reliant on inventory for automotive manufacturing. In 2019, the world was hit by the Coronavirus virus outbreak known as COVID-19, which became a global health pandemic that significantly affected the global economy. The pandemic and lockdown measures implemented, seriously affected the automotive industry, in particular inventory management as it led to raw materials inventory shortages due to delivery delays. Therefore, the primary objective of this study was to investigate the inventory management decisions influencing effective inventory management in the South African automotive component manufacturing (SAACM) industry prior to Covid-19 and whether and how it changed since the Covid-19 pandemic. The comprehensive literature review identified four inventory management decisions as independent variables (inventory forecasting, inventory storage, inventory control and inventory staff capabilities management) and effective inventory management as the dependent variable in the proposed hypothesised model. The model was tested to establish the influence of the identified four inventory management decisions on effective inventory management in ACMs prior to Covid-19 and then again since Covid-19. A quantitative research approach was followed to collect data required for the hypothesis testing. Nonprobability sampling in particular judgemental sampling was utilised for this study by selecting respondents employed by ACMs in South Africa as logistics managers, supply chain managers, production supervisors, master production schedulers, cycle count operators and warehouse staff. A selfadministered internet-based questionnaire was used to obtain the data from the target sample comprising 200 respondents, of which 162 were usable for further statistical analysis. Data was analysed first for prior to and then for since Covid-19 using Statistica Version 14 computer software. Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) was used to extract the variables and validate the measuring instrument. The Cronbach's alpha values for reliability were confirmed for each of the variables identified in the two sets of EFAs. All four independent variables (inventory v management decisions) and the dependent variable (effective inventory management) for prior to as well as since Covid-19 were found to be valid and reliable and retained for further analyses. The results of the Pearson product moment correlation coefficients reported mostly weak and moderate associations between variables for both prior to and since Covid-19. The results of the multiple regression analysis (MRA) for prior to Covid-19 found four statistically significant relationships between the four independent variables - inventory forecasting management, inventory storage management, inventory control management and inventory staff capabilities management and the dependent variable effective inventory management. The results of the MRA for since Covid-19 found two statistically significant relationships between two independent variables inventory forecasting management and inventory resource management and the dependent variable effective inventory management. The tested hypothesised model provides a framework for further testing in future ACM inventory management studies in other countries. Business managers and inventory management staff of global ACMs can use it as a guide for effective inventory management; on which specific inventory management decisions to always pay attention to and, which inventory management decisions to pay attention to when a long-lasting pandemic occurs such as Covid-19. It is recommended that regardless of the Covid-19 pandemic, inventory managers in ACMs in South Africa should consider inventory forecasting management methods such as demand forecasting, determining the economic order quantity (EOQ) for all inventory item orders and materials requirement planning (MRP). They should also use an inventory information sharing system and inventory replenishment procedure to ensure inventory is managed effectively. During a prolonged pandemic such as Covid-19, inventory managers in ACMs in South Africa should pay particular attention to inventory resource management specifically regarding re-order inventory levels and classifying all inventory items according to the importance of using ABC analysis. They should further offer employees inventory training to remain abreast of new inventory developments in the industry and for career advancement. , Thesis (MCom) -- Faculty of Business and Economics Science, School of Applied Accounting, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Investigating various product derivatives for a sustainable aquaculture feed supply chain in South Africa
- Authors: Adam, Yusuf
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Derivatives product , sustainable aquaculture , Supply Chain management -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral's theses , Thesis
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59531 , vital:62150
- Description: Contemporary aquaculture produces more seafood for growing global nutrition requirements than capture fisheries stocks, but aquaculture practices do have adverse environmental impacts. This research investigated more sustainable marine ecosystem management practices through alternative aquaculture feed ingredients and production systems that mimic natural marine food chains. The aim was to find an alternative feed model to make the industry more sustainable. Content analysis was used to let secondary research complement the empirical research to investigate the perceptions about various product derivatives for a more sustainable aquaculture feed supply chain. The survey entailed distributing 228 questionnaires and only 55 diverse stakeholders responded. By reviewing their perceptions of natural marine organisms and manufactured agricultural ingredients, the call for sustainably produced aquaculture feed could inform future sustainable supply chain management and marine ecosystem stewardship. , Thesis (DBA) -- Faculty of Business and Economic Sciences, School of Applied Accounting, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Adam, Yusuf
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Derivatives product , sustainable aquaculture , Supply Chain management -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral's theses , Thesis
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59531 , vital:62150
- Description: Contemporary aquaculture produces more seafood for growing global nutrition requirements than capture fisheries stocks, but aquaculture practices do have adverse environmental impacts. This research investigated more sustainable marine ecosystem management practices through alternative aquaculture feed ingredients and production systems that mimic natural marine food chains. The aim was to find an alternative feed model to make the industry more sustainable. Content analysis was used to let secondary research complement the empirical research to investigate the perceptions about various product derivatives for a more sustainable aquaculture feed supply chain. The survey entailed distributing 228 questionnaires and only 55 diverse stakeholders responded. By reviewing their perceptions of natural marine organisms and manufactured agricultural ingredients, the call for sustainably produced aquaculture feed could inform future sustainable supply chain management and marine ecosystem stewardship. , Thesis (DBA) -- Faculty of Business and Economic Sciences, School of Applied Accounting, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Investigation of thermal and electrical characteristics of crystalline silicon photovoltaic modules under varying operational conditions
- Authors: Vumbugwa, Monphias
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Photovoltaic power generation -- South Africa , Silicon crystals -- South Africa , Solar cells
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60014 , vital:62733
- Description: Solar energy has become an attractive and environmentally mindful method in electrical power generation as it contributes significantly to meeting the high demand for the power needed for socio and economic developments. The rise in deployment of Photovoltaic (PV) facilities with large capacity creates the need for accurate and reliable PV inspection techniques for optimum performance, the longevity of PV modules and quick return on PV investment. The performance of PV modules in the field is often monitored through several inspection methods that require a rapid throughput such as Thermal Infrared (TIR) imaging and current-voltage (I-V) measurements. Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) based TIR imaging is widely applied in large PV plants since it is cost-effective and is usually conducted in-situ while the plant is operating at irradiance levels above 600 W.m-2 . One of the outcomes of the interpretations of TIR images is an attempt to quantify the energy loss in PV plants associated with the abnormal thermal signatures identified on TIR images. No standard procedure has yet outlined the quantification of energy loss related to TIR images of underperforming modules since the interpretation of TIR images remains a challenge. PV modules operate under dynamic operating conditions which can influence the results and interpretation of thermal and electrical characterisation measurements. Dynamic operation conditions refer to any disorders in the operation of the modules and cells which cause a change in the current and voltage characteristics of the PV source. These dynamic operation conditions include; changesin load conditions, irradiance, soiling and shading levels. The tests were done under steady state conditions. Although measurements are generally done while the operating conditions are as steady as possible, some changes in conditions have a profound effect on thermal and electrical measurements. In this study, these effects and some of the changes in conditions that cause them were studied. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, School of Computer Science, Mathematics, Physics and Statistics, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Vumbugwa, Monphias
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Photovoltaic power generation -- South Africa , Silicon crystals -- South Africa , Solar cells
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60014 , vital:62733
- Description: Solar energy has become an attractive and environmentally mindful method in electrical power generation as it contributes significantly to meeting the high demand for the power needed for socio and economic developments. The rise in deployment of Photovoltaic (PV) facilities with large capacity creates the need for accurate and reliable PV inspection techniques for optimum performance, the longevity of PV modules and quick return on PV investment. The performance of PV modules in the field is often monitored through several inspection methods that require a rapid throughput such as Thermal Infrared (TIR) imaging and current-voltage (I-V) measurements. Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) based TIR imaging is widely applied in large PV plants since it is cost-effective and is usually conducted in-situ while the plant is operating at irradiance levels above 600 W.m-2 . One of the outcomes of the interpretations of TIR images is an attempt to quantify the energy loss in PV plants associated with the abnormal thermal signatures identified on TIR images. No standard procedure has yet outlined the quantification of energy loss related to TIR images of underperforming modules since the interpretation of TIR images remains a challenge. PV modules operate under dynamic operating conditions which can influence the results and interpretation of thermal and electrical characterisation measurements. Dynamic operation conditions refer to any disorders in the operation of the modules and cells which cause a change in the current and voltage characteristics of the PV source. These dynamic operation conditions include; changesin load conditions, irradiance, soiling and shading levels. The tests were done under steady state conditions. Although measurements are generally done while the operating conditions are as steady as possible, some changes in conditions have a profound effect on thermal and electrical measurements. In this study, these effects and some of the changes in conditions that cause them were studied. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, School of Computer Science, Mathematics, Physics and Statistics, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Knee Joint Competence Post Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction in Amateur South Western Districts Rugby Players
- Potgieter, Quinten Christiaan
- Authors: Potgieter, Quinten Christiaan
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Neuromuscular depolarizing agents , Knee--Wounds and injuries -- South Western Districts , Rugby Players
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60266 , vital:64289
- Description: Background: Globally, literature has shown that rugby players struggle to return to the same level of performance post anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction. This phenomenon is further exacerbated amongst South African Rugby players, compounded by the ranking of the national team amongst the top ten rugby teams worldwide. Paired with the psychosocial aspect of return to play, the physical and physiological competence of the knee joint is of pivotal importance. Purpose: To compare relative dynamic stability scores paired with electromyography (EMG) scores between the injured and uninjured legs, thereby enabling an explorative, descriptive report on dynamic proprioceptive abilities post ACL reconstruction (ACLR). The study findings therefore aim to inform rehabilitative practice in a rugby player who underwent ACLR. Study Design: A quantitative, explorative and descriptive design was used, with a purposive sampling strategy. Methods: Biographical and anthropometrical data was measured upon inception. Muscular activation was measured using electromyography (EMG) placements on quadriceps muscles which included the vastus medialis obliques (VMO), and vastus lateralis (VL). Dynamic proprioception was measured using the star excursion balance test (SEBT) and normalised to leg length. A neuromuscular fatigue protocol was used to measure the impact of neuromuscular fatigue on dynamic stability, and muscle activation between the injured and uninjured lower limbs. Results: A sample of 15 participants from the South Western Districts (SWD) rugby team, fitting the inclusion criteria, were included in the study. The average age was 27±2.7 years. The results indicated that fatigue did not significantly affect the SEBT scores between the injured and uninjured lower limbs. However, the VMO muscle activation showed a statistically significant difference in muscle firing in a pre-fatigue state. This difference was evident in two of the eight directions namely anteromedial direction (p = 0.041), and in the lateral direction (p = 0.047). Furthermore, these result differences were favoured in the uninjured limb. No significant differences between the injured and uninjured lower limbs were found in respect to VMO and VL muscle activation, in a fatigued state. vi Conclusion: Practically translated, the study results showed that the injured lower limb, showed no significant differences in dynamic stability during both the non-fatigued and the fatigued SEBT. Therefore, the finding of this study is a steppingstone towards informing return to play criteria for adequate dynamic knee stability and proprioception. It should be noted that further research is necessary to refine return to play criteria and thereby decrease the risk for re-injury. Keywords: anterior cruciate ligament; dynamic stability; neuro-muscular fatigue; reconstruction; re-injury; return-to-sport; rugby. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Health Sciences, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Potgieter, Quinten Christiaan
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Neuromuscular depolarizing agents , Knee--Wounds and injuries -- South Western Districts , Rugby Players
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60266 , vital:64289
- Description: Background: Globally, literature has shown that rugby players struggle to return to the same level of performance post anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction. This phenomenon is further exacerbated amongst South African Rugby players, compounded by the ranking of the national team amongst the top ten rugby teams worldwide. Paired with the psychosocial aspect of return to play, the physical and physiological competence of the knee joint is of pivotal importance. Purpose: To compare relative dynamic stability scores paired with electromyography (EMG) scores between the injured and uninjured legs, thereby enabling an explorative, descriptive report on dynamic proprioceptive abilities post ACL reconstruction (ACLR). The study findings therefore aim to inform rehabilitative practice in a rugby player who underwent ACLR. Study Design: A quantitative, explorative and descriptive design was used, with a purposive sampling strategy. Methods: Biographical and anthropometrical data was measured upon inception. Muscular activation was measured using electromyography (EMG) placements on quadriceps muscles which included the vastus medialis obliques (VMO), and vastus lateralis (VL). Dynamic proprioception was measured using the star excursion balance test (SEBT) and normalised to leg length. A neuromuscular fatigue protocol was used to measure the impact of neuromuscular fatigue on dynamic stability, and muscle activation between the injured and uninjured lower limbs. Results: A sample of 15 participants from the South Western Districts (SWD) rugby team, fitting the inclusion criteria, were included in the study. The average age was 27±2.7 years. The results indicated that fatigue did not significantly affect the SEBT scores between the injured and uninjured lower limbs. However, the VMO muscle activation showed a statistically significant difference in muscle firing in a pre-fatigue state. This difference was evident in two of the eight directions namely anteromedial direction (p = 0.041), and in the lateral direction (p = 0.047). Furthermore, these result differences were favoured in the uninjured limb. No significant differences between the injured and uninjured lower limbs were found in respect to VMO and VL muscle activation, in a fatigued state. vi Conclusion: Practically translated, the study results showed that the injured lower limb, showed no significant differences in dynamic stability during both the non-fatigued and the fatigued SEBT. Therefore, the finding of this study is a steppingstone towards informing return to play criteria for adequate dynamic knee stability and proprioception. It should be noted that further research is necessary to refine return to play criteria and thereby decrease the risk for re-injury. Keywords: anterior cruciate ligament; dynamic stability; neuro-muscular fatigue; reconstruction; re-injury; return-to-sport; rugby. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Health Sciences, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Leader preparedness to manage employee wellness at Continental Tyres
- Authors: O’Reilly, Clynn
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Employee management , Health promotion, Continental Tyres
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , Thesis
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59809 , vital:62436
- Description: Many businesses are becoming more aware of the importance of employee well-being and health. There has been increasing public interest in merging wellness activities with an employer's obligations. This shift toward healthy workplaces and empowered individuals reflects a correlation between organisational well-being and pleasant psychological states. As a result, several programmes such as Employee Assistance Programmes (EAP) and Employee Wellness Programmes were established to address workplace wellness issues. Employee Wellness Programmes are intervention programmes targeted at improving the well-being of employees. The epidemic has underlined what was already obvious prior to the virus's emergence: that firms no longer require hero leaders. Today's most effective leadership at all levels is not about technical knowledge or knowing all the answers. It is about being human, displaying vulnerability, connecting with others, while being able to unlock their potential, in addition to communicating a clear direction. This study was conducted to determine the preparedness of leaders to manage employee wellness at lower, middle and upper management levels at Continental Tyres South Africa (SA). For this study, primary data was collected by means of semistructured interviews. Qualitative data was collected by conducting interviews with employees from lower, middle and upper management. Face-to-face interviews, using open ended questions, were used to assess managers’ preparedness to address staff wellbeing. Employee wellbeing is a vital component for any organisation's performance in all facets of business operations, according to the findings. Fundamental training is required to ensure leaders are prepared to deal with employee wellness issues. The absence of this training is a major contributor to inadequate policies, procedures, and cultures that should promote employee wellness in an organisation. The lack of training that would contribute to leader preparedness in managing employee wellness has been apparent in this study. Another emerging conclusion that was highlighted in this study is the lack of prioritisation of wellness initiatives and awareness of resources available to employees. This conclusion is a key factor in understanding why there is such a iii deficiency in fundamental training for leaders within the organisation. The lack of prioritisation could have a direct impact on the lack of training offered to leaders in the organisation. , Thesis (MBA) -- Faculty of Business and Economic Science, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: O’Reilly, Clynn
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Employee management , Health promotion, Continental Tyres
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , Thesis
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59809 , vital:62436
- Description: Many businesses are becoming more aware of the importance of employee well-being and health. There has been increasing public interest in merging wellness activities with an employer's obligations. This shift toward healthy workplaces and empowered individuals reflects a correlation between organisational well-being and pleasant psychological states. As a result, several programmes such as Employee Assistance Programmes (EAP) and Employee Wellness Programmes were established to address workplace wellness issues. Employee Wellness Programmes are intervention programmes targeted at improving the well-being of employees. The epidemic has underlined what was already obvious prior to the virus's emergence: that firms no longer require hero leaders. Today's most effective leadership at all levels is not about technical knowledge or knowing all the answers. It is about being human, displaying vulnerability, connecting with others, while being able to unlock their potential, in addition to communicating a clear direction. This study was conducted to determine the preparedness of leaders to manage employee wellness at lower, middle and upper management levels at Continental Tyres South Africa (SA). For this study, primary data was collected by means of semistructured interviews. Qualitative data was collected by conducting interviews with employees from lower, middle and upper management. Face-to-face interviews, using open ended questions, were used to assess managers’ preparedness to address staff wellbeing. Employee wellbeing is a vital component for any organisation's performance in all facets of business operations, according to the findings. Fundamental training is required to ensure leaders are prepared to deal with employee wellness issues. The absence of this training is a major contributor to inadequate policies, procedures, and cultures that should promote employee wellness in an organisation. The lack of training that would contribute to leader preparedness in managing employee wellness has been apparent in this study. Another emerging conclusion that was highlighted in this study is the lack of prioritisation of wellness initiatives and awareness of resources available to employees. This conclusion is a key factor in understanding why there is such a iii deficiency in fundamental training for leaders within the organisation. The lack of prioritisation could have a direct impact on the lack of training offered to leaders in the organisation. , Thesis (MBA) -- Faculty of Business and Economic Science, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Low energy storage off-grid photovoltaic systems
- Authors: Ribisi, Edwin Tebogo
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Solar panels , Photovoltaic power systems
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60489 , vital:65634
- Description: Electricity is one of humanity's most important resources for enhancing the quality of life. With over 770 million people worldwide still without access to electricity, this is a big global challenge that requires a variety of solutions if we humans are to achieve the 2030 sustainable development objectives, such as zero poverty and universal access to electricity. A major number of the 770 million people who lack access to electricity reside in regions with abundant sun irradiation. Electrification is a practical key to unlocking socio-economic development in impoverished regions. PV systems with batteries have a disadvantage of requiring high capital costs, with batteries being the most expensive component in such a system. Accumulation of maintenance and replacement costs of batteries are high throughout the lifespan of a PV system with batteries due to limited lifespan of batteries, typical 1-3 years. A batteryless PV system for daytime commercial purposes is proposed in the dissertation. An experimental set up of the proposed batteryless PV system was constructed and tested in a laboratory. A load controller for the batteryless PV system was implemented, loads were given priority levels and schedule times to be operated during the day. A DC dump load regulates DC bus voltage and also acts as a water heater. Furthermore, a simulation model was developed on MATLAB Simulink. The simulation model consisted of two case study scenarios, 3 solar panel system and 7 solar panel system of an internet café business. Better system performance was noticed when loads were given priority levels with no schedule times. This dissertation establishes the foundation for a completely batteryless solar system designed to cultivate daytime economic activities in impoverished communities to increase revenue opportunities. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Engineering, the Built Environment and Technology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Ribisi, Edwin Tebogo
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Solar panels , Photovoltaic power systems
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60489 , vital:65634
- Description: Electricity is one of humanity's most important resources for enhancing the quality of life. With over 770 million people worldwide still without access to electricity, this is a big global challenge that requires a variety of solutions if we humans are to achieve the 2030 sustainable development objectives, such as zero poverty and universal access to electricity. A major number of the 770 million people who lack access to electricity reside in regions with abundant sun irradiation. Electrification is a practical key to unlocking socio-economic development in impoverished regions. PV systems with batteries have a disadvantage of requiring high capital costs, with batteries being the most expensive component in such a system. Accumulation of maintenance and replacement costs of batteries are high throughout the lifespan of a PV system with batteries due to limited lifespan of batteries, typical 1-3 years. A batteryless PV system for daytime commercial purposes is proposed in the dissertation. An experimental set up of the proposed batteryless PV system was constructed and tested in a laboratory. A load controller for the batteryless PV system was implemented, loads were given priority levels and schedule times to be operated during the day. A DC dump load regulates DC bus voltage and also acts as a water heater. Furthermore, a simulation model was developed on MATLAB Simulink. The simulation model consisted of two case study scenarios, 3 solar panel system and 7 solar panel system of an internet café business. Better system performance was noticed when loads were given priority levels with no schedule times. This dissertation establishes the foundation for a completely batteryless solar system designed to cultivate daytime economic activities in impoverished communities to increase revenue opportunities. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Engineering, the Built Environment and Technology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Main thesis title
- Authors: Tsamago, Hodi, Elias
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Technology integration , SOLEs pedagogy , Metacognitive
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60549 , vital:65833
- Description: The study was carried out to investigate the effect of the use of technology in self-organised learning environments (SOLEs) (in Physical Sciences classrooms) on learners’ metacognitive skills. The study contributes by identifying a technology-enhanced pedagogy that can effectively equip learners with metacognitive skills, which many studies have reported as having an effect on Physical Sciences learners’ conceptual understanding. The study followed an experimental (control group quasi-experimental) methods design, in which both qualitative and quantitative data were collected and analysed. A multistep stratified sampling method (which caters for both quantitative and qualitative facets) was employed to choose four schools (two rural and two urban) to participate in the study. These schools were randomly chosen from the population of all schools offering Physical Sciences in Grade 11 in the Capricorn District of Limpopo Province, South Africa were assigned to urban experimental group and rural experimental group (UEG and REG) and urban control group and rural control group (UCG and RCG) using geographical demographics. The participants were selected using both simple random sampling (for quantitative methods) and purposive sampling (for qualitative methods). The experimental groups were taught by the researcher using self-organised learning environments (SOLEs) pedagogy, while control groups were taught (also by the researcher of the study) using a traditional chalk-and-talk approach. A Physical Sciences concepts pre-/post-test and the Metacognitive Self-Assessment Scale (MSAS) questionnaire were used to glean the quantitative data, while focus group interviews (FGIs) were used to obtain the qualitative data. The analysis of the quantitative data employed both descriptive (mean, standard deviation and graphs) and inferential (both parametric t-test and non-parametric Kruskal-Wallis and Wilcoxon signed-rank tests) statistics computed using the SPSS package version 22, while qualitative data were analysed thematically using coding techniques (applied on a sentence-by-sentence basis) after the transcription of the recorded FGIs. The study found that SOLEs pedagogy improves learners’ metacognitive skills, leading to better Physical Sciences conceptual understanding. In addition, the results indicate that all v aspects of metacognitive skills improved in experimental groups; however, certain aspects exhibited outstanding improvement such as “Respect shown to myself”; “Respect shown to others”; “Respect shown for empathy towards others” and “Respect shown towards problem solving”. Furthermore, the results of the FGIs revealed that a plausible explanation for the ability of SOLEs pedagogy to enhance metacognitive skills lies in its effortlessness to enable learners to link their classroom experiences to real-life experiences; simulate practical work; adapt to collaborative learning; use multiple channels for receiving information; and reducing learners’ reliance on the teacher. Hence, this study recommends the implementation of SOLEs pedagogy in the Physical Sciences classroom to improve learners’ metacognitive skills and conceptual understanding. However, the study had limitations, some of which included the sample size (which has an effect on the degree of generalisability of the research findings) and the period during which SOLEs pedagogy was implemented which might not have been long enough to exhaust its effect on metacognitive skills. Accordingly, further studies employing a longitudinal study design with a sample size bigger than 350 participants would be useful in understanding the effects of SOLEs pedagogy on metacognitive skills and improving the generalisability of research findings , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of education, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Tsamago, Hodi, Elias
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Technology integration , SOLEs pedagogy , Metacognitive
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60549 , vital:65833
- Description: The study was carried out to investigate the effect of the use of technology in self-organised learning environments (SOLEs) (in Physical Sciences classrooms) on learners’ metacognitive skills. The study contributes by identifying a technology-enhanced pedagogy that can effectively equip learners with metacognitive skills, which many studies have reported as having an effect on Physical Sciences learners’ conceptual understanding. The study followed an experimental (control group quasi-experimental) methods design, in which both qualitative and quantitative data were collected and analysed. A multistep stratified sampling method (which caters for both quantitative and qualitative facets) was employed to choose four schools (two rural and two urban) to participate in the study. These schools were randomly chosen from the population of all schools offering Physical Sciences in Grade 11 in the Capricorn District of Limpopo Province, South Africa were assigned to urban experimental group and rural experimental group (UEG and REG) and urban control group and rural control group (UCG and RCG) using geographical demographics. The participants were selected using both simple random sampling (for quantitative methods) and purposive sampling (for qualitative methods). The experimental groups were taught by the researcher using self-organised learning environments (SOLEs) pedagogy, while control groups were taught (also by the researcher of the study) using a traditional chalk-and-talk approach. A Physical Sciences concepts pre-/post-test and the Metacognitive Self-Assessment Scale (MSAS) questionnaire were used to glean the quantitative data, while focus group interviews (FGIs) were used to obtain the qualitative data. The analysis of the quantitative data employed both descriptive (mean, standard deviation and graphs) and inferential (both parametric t-test and non-parametric Kruskal-Wallis and Wilcoxon signed-rank tests) statistics computed using the SPSS package version 22, while qualitative data were analysed thematically using coding techniques (applied on a sentence-by-sentence basis) after the transcription of the recorded FGIs. The study found that SOLEs pedagogy improves learners’ metacognitive skills, leading to better Physical Sciences conceptual understanding. In addition, the results indicate that all v aspects of metacognitive skills improved in experimental groups; however, certain aspects exhibited outstanding improvement such as “Respect shown to myself”; “Respect shown to others”; “Respect shown for empathy towards others” and “Respect shown towards problem solving”. Furthermore, the results of the FGIs revealed that a plausible explanation for the ability of SOLEs pedagogy to enhance metacognitive skills lies in its effortlessness to enable learners to link their classroom experiences to real-life experiences; simulate practical work; adapt to collaborative learning; use multiple channels for receiving information; and reducing learners’ reliance on the teacher. Hence, this study recommends the implementation of SOLEs pedagogy in the Physical Sciences classroom to improve learners’ metacognitive skills and conceptual understanding. However, the study had limitations, some of which included the sample size (which has an effect on the degree of generalisability of the research findings) and the period during which SOLEs pedagogy was implemented which might not have been long enough to exhaust its effect on metacognitive skills. Accordingly, further studies employing a longitudinal study design with a sample size bigger than 350 participants would be useful in understanding the effects of SOLEs pedagogy on metacognitive skills and improving the generalisability of research findings , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of education, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Mesozooplankton and particle dynamics in Algoa Bay, South Africa
- Engelbrecht, Melindi Frances
- Authors: Engelbrecht, Melindi Frances
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Marine zooplankton – Algoa bay -- South Africa , Estuarine ecology , Zooplankton –Ecology --South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59544 , vital:62157
- Description: Coastal ecosystems provide society with important ecosystem services: climate regulation, biogeochemical nutrient and waste cycling, food security, shoreline protection, tourism, and recreational support. Increased anthropogenic pressure on coastal ecosystems and changing environmental variables ultimately affect the provision of ecosystem services. Mesozooplankton are key trophic species and biological indicators of change within the marine environment and provide sound predictions of ecosystem responses to a changing climate due to their short life cycles and physiology linked to temperature. Algoa Bay has been the subject of extensive research and monitoring and encompasses a marine protected area (Addo Elephant National Park MPA). The Underwater Vision Profiler 5 (UVP5) was utilised with conventional sampling techniques of the PELTER monitoring program (i.e., Bongo nets) to investigate mesozooplankton (200 – 2000 µm) and particle (> 100 µm) dynamics within the dynamic coastal ecosystem of Algoa Bay, located within warmtemperate South Africa, in spring 2020 and summer 2021. This study revealed seasonal shifts in mesozooplankton taxa succession from spring herbivorous/omnivorous, dominated by copepods, to summer omnivorous/carnivorous mesozooplankton, dominated by copepods, Noctiluca sp., Cladocera, doliolids, salps and siphonophores. The mesozooplankton integrated abundance (mean ± standard error) increased from spring to summer, with 101 ± 26 (min. – max.: 18 – 200) x 103 ind m¯ 2 and 422 ± 80 (min. – max.: 37 – 1056) x 103 ind m¯ 2 , respectively. In summer, mesozooplankton composition was affected by the passage of a Natal Pulse, identified from satellite-derived sea level anomaly data. This study also provided the first vertical profiles of copepod distributions and suspended particles in Algoa Bay, with a peak of small particle (< 1 mm ESD) biomass close to the bottom and often, but not systematically, higher copepod abundances above the thermocline. The results presented herein are expected to contribute to the understanding of the coastal pelagic ecosystem in Algoa Bay in response to environmental perturbations , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, School of Environmental Sciences, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Engelbrecht, Melindi Frances
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Marine zooplankton – Algoa bay -- South Africa , Estuarine ecology , Zooplankton –Ecology --South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59544 , vital:62157
- Description: Coastal ecosystems provide society with important ecosystem services: climate regulation, biogeochemical nutrient and waste cycling, food security, shoreline protection, tourism, and recreational support. Increased anthropogenic pressure on coastal ecosystems and changing environmental variables ultimately affect the provision of ecosystem services. Mesozooplankton are key trophic species and biological indicators of change within the marine environment and provide sound predictions of ecosystem responses to a changing climate due to their short life cycles and physiology linked to temperature. Algoa Bay has been the subject of extensive research and monitoring and encompasses a marine protected area (Addo Elephant National Park MPA). The Underwater Vision Profiler 5 (UVP5) was utilised with conventional sampling techniques of the PELTER monitoring program (i.e., Bongo nets) to investigate mesozooplankton (200 – 2000 µm) and particle (> 100 µm) dynamics within the dynamic coastal ecosystem of Algoa Bay, located within warmtemperate South Africa, in spring 2020 and summer 2021. This study revealed seasonal shifts in mesozooplankton taxa succession from spring herbivorous/omnivorous, dominated by copepods, to summer omnivorous/carnivorous mesozooplankton, dominated by copepods, Noctiluca sp., Cladocera, doliolids, salps and siphonophores. The mesozooplankton integrated abundance (mean ± standard error) increased from spring to summer, with 101 ± 26 (min. – max.: 18 – 200) x 103 ind m¯ 2 and 422 ± 80 (min. – max.: 37 – 1056) x 103 ind m¯ 2 , respectively. In summer, mesozooplankton composition was affected by the passage of a Natal Pulse, identified from satellite-derived sea level anomaly data. This study also provided the first vertical profiles of copepod distributions and suspended particles in Algoa Bay, with a peak of small particle (< 1 mm ESD) biomass close to the bottom and often, but not systematically, higher copepod abundances above the thermocline. The results presented herein are expected to contribute to the understanding of the coastal pelagic ecosystem in Algoa Bay in response to environmental perturbations , Thesis (MSc) -- Faculty of Science, School of Environmental Sciences, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Modular Omni-directional AGV Developmental Platform with Integrated Suspension, Power-plant and Control Systems
- Authors: Macfarlane, Alexander B. S
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Automated guided vehicle systems , Electric automobiles--Batteries--Design and construction
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59500 , vital:62123
- Description: The thesis focuses on the development of an industrial automatic guided vehicle (AGV) with omni-directional capabilities. The omni-directional strategy used was the "swerve drive" system, a system whereby a wheel can be rotated about both its y axis (rolling axis) and z axis (vertical axis). Unlike most commonly used swerve drive systems that have swerve capabilities on each wheel attached to the body of the vehicle, this research seeks to reduce cost by only having swerve capabilities on two diagonal wheels. The remaining two wheels will act as castor units. AC drives are used on the system in place of more traditional DC drives, due to their cost vs capability advantage over DC and their prevalence in the industrial environment. Since an AGV is a mobile platform any power source found on it is usually derived from batteries, a DC source. Usage of DC introduces several limitations including difficulty transforming voltage levels for different systems, inability to run AC drives directly from the power source and comparably larger conduction wires. These limitations were overcome by adding a stand-alone power-plant on the AGV in the form of an inverter. The inverter transformed the DC power supplied by a battery bank from 48 volts DC to 230 volts AC. Thus, the primary focus of this research is on the development and validation of a novel two wheel omni-directional drive system that makes use of inexpensive and readily available components that have already been proven to work in industry. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Engineering, the Built Environment, and Technology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Macfarlane, Alexander B. S
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Automated guided vehicle systems , Electric automobiles--Batteries--Design and construction
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59500 , vital:62123
- Description: The thesis focuses on the development of an industrial automatic guided vehicle (AGV) with omni-directional capabilities. The omni-directional strategy used was the "swerve drive" system, a system whereby a wheel can be rotated about both its y axis (rolling axis) and z axis (vertical axis). Unlike most commonly used swerve drive systems that have swerve capabilities on each wheel attached to the body of the vehicle, this research seeks to reduce cost by only having swerve capabilities on two diagonal wheels. The remaining two wheels will act as castor units. AC drives are used on the system in place of more traditional DC drives, due to their cost vs capability advantage over DC and their prevalence in the industrial environment. Since an AGV is a mobile platform any power source found on it is usually derived from batteries, a DC source. Usage of DC introduces several limitations including difficulty transforming voltage levels for different systems, inability to run AC drives directly from the power source and comparably larger conduction wires. These limitations were overcome by adding a stand-alone power-plant on the AGV in the form of an inverter. The inverter transformed the DC power supplied by a battery bank from 48 volts DC to 230 volts AC. Thus, the primary focus of this research is on the development and validation of a novel two wheel omni-directional drive system that makes use of inexpensive and readily available components that have already been proven to work in industry. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Engineering, the Built Environment, and Technology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Moult and energetics in three species from the Euplectes genus representing a gradient of elaborate plumage ornamentation
- Authors: Webb, Stacey Leigh
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Sexual selection in animals – South Africa , Bird watching -- Africa, Southern , Plumage
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60026 , vital:62734
- Description: Elaborate plumage ornamentation in birds has fascinated scientists since the 1800s. The evolution and persistence of elaborate and costly ornamentation seemed to be in opposition to the theory of natural selection. However, over the years research has revealed the role and functional significance of elaborate plumage ornamentation in sexual selection. Recent studies have shown that the energetic costs associated with moulting into new plumages are higher than maintenance costs, but these costs have not been quantified for species that exhibit elaborate breeding plumage ornamentation for sexual selection. In addition, for these sexually selected ornamental traits (signals) to have evolved and be maintained, there must be some aspect of individual quality that they convey to the receiver. Despite a large body of literature on sexual selection, honest signalling and ornamental plumage in birds, the physiological correlates of honest signalling during sexual selection and the messages these signals convey to the receivers are poorly understood. In this study, I investigated four aspects related to the honesty of the sexual selection signal. These were (i) seasonal variation in standardised resting metabolic rates of breeding and non-breeding birds, (ii) moult phenology, (iii) physiological parameters linked to honest signalling, and (iv) the energetic costs of production and maintenance of elaborate plumage ornamentation using three species from the Euplectes genus as model species. The three species selected, the red-collared widowbird (Euplectes ardens), fan-tailed widowbird (Euplectes axillaris) and the southern red bishop (Euplectes orix) represent a gradient of plumage elaboration and although the receivers of the sexual selection signals are known for these three species, the energetic cost of the signals and the underlying message the signals convey remain unknown. I measured seasonal variation in resting metabolic rate (RMR), body mass (Mb), thermoneutral zone (TNZ) and body temperature (Tb) over the course of two years in the three selected Euplectes species (E. ardens, E. axillaris and E. orix; chapter 2). My results showed no significant effect of season on RMR (except in E. orix females) suggesting that in these species the metabolic costs in summer (associated with breeding season) are comparable to the metabolic costs associated with thermoregulation during winter. Contrary to my prediction that metabolic costs would increase along a gradient of increasing tail length (due to the energetic costs Webb V associated with elaborate plumage ornamentation), I found no significant effect of species. The lack of a significant result indicates that once the initial investment in plumage is complete, other predictor variables play a role (in this case body mass). , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, School of Environmental Sciences, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Webb, Stacey Leigh
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Sexual selection in animals – South Africa , Bird watching -- Africa, Southern , Plumage
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60026 , vital:62734
- Description: Elaborate plumage ornamentation in birds has fascinated scientists since the 1800s. The evolution and persistence of elaborate and costly ornamentation seemed to be in opposition to the theory of natural selection. However, over the years research has revealed the role and functional significance of elaborate plumage ornamentation in sexual selection. Recent studies have shown that the energetic costs associated with moulting into new plumages are higher than maintenance costs, but these costs have not been quantified for species that exhibit elaborate breeding plumage ornamentation for sexual selection. In addition, for these sexually selected ornamental traits (signals) to have evolved and be maintained, there must be some aspect of individual quality that they convey to the receiver. Despite a large body of literature on sexual selection, honest signalling and ornamental plumage in birds, the physiological correlates of honest signalling during sexual selection and the messages these signals convey to the receivers are poorly understood. In this study, I investigated four aspects related to the honesty of the sexual selection signal. These were (i) seasonal variation in standardised resting metabolic rates of breeding and non-breeding birds, (ii) moult phenology, (iii) physiological parameters linked to honest signalling, and (iv) the energetic costs of production and maintenance of elaborate plumage ornamentation using three species from the Euplectes genus as model species. The three species selected, the red-collared widowbird (Euplectes ardens), fan-tailed widowbird (Euplectes axillaris) and the southern red bishop (Euplectes orix) represent a gradient of plumage elaboration and although the receivers of the sexual selection signals are known for these three species, the energetic cost of the signals and the underlying message the signals convey remain unknown. I measured seasonal variation in resting metabolic rate (RMR), body mass (Mb), thermoneutral zone (TNZ) and body temperature (Tb) over the course of two years in the three selected Euplectes species (E. ardens, E. axillaris and E. orix; chapter 2). My results showed no significant effect of season on RMR (except in E. orix females) suggesting that in these species the metabolic costs in summer (associated with breeding season) are comparable to the metabolic costs associated with thermoregulation during winter. Contrary to my prediction that metabolic costs would increase along a gradient of increasing tail length (due to the energetic costs Webb V associated with elaborate plumage ornamentation), I found no significant effect of species. The lack of a significant result indicates that once the initial investment in plumage is complete, other predictor variables play a role (in this case body mass). , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Science, School of Environmental Sciences, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Participatory communications as a tool for women’s empowerment: A study of five community radio stations in Northern Ghana
- Authors: Asuman, Kofi Antwi Manfred
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Women in agriculture -- Africa -- Ghana , Agricultural development , Community radios – Ghana
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59293 , vital:62026
- Description: In the process of achieving social equity and local development in Ghana, the empowerment and improvement of the lives of women remain critical factors, because of the existing role women and girls assume in the household and larger communal setting. In Northern Ghana culture and religion have historically side-lined, and in some cases, completely excluded women from participating in the dialogues, economic and political processes that lead to, or facilitate the transformation and development of their households and communities. Even though the media has largely contributed to the discrimination and stereotype of women through how women are represented in mainstream media, the Ghanaian media, in its assumed role as the “fourth estate of the realm” has the power to explicitly advocate and implicitly frame messages which can accelerate the processes of social change, women’s empowerment and social inclusion through the community radio broadcast system (Diedong, 2017: pp. 59, 64). After 30 years of the liberalization of the Ghanaian media and 25 years after the opening of the first community radio station, there have been few studies of how community radio influences women’s empowerment, how it gives opportunity for women to participate in political processes and whether, and how, it strengthens the livelihood capabilities of women. This research was motivated by the empowerment theory and the theory of participatory development communications. The researcher also makes references to feminist media theory in his arguments about the need for women to have access to radio in order to make their own content and also listen to content produced by other women. This study adopted a mixed methods research approach and collected data through programme analysis of the sampled radio stations, focus group discussions and semi-structured interviews. After field data was collected, they were analysed in themes that focus on the objectives of this study, data is presented through thematic discourse methods in order to help the researcher draw conclusions and propose a framework to guide practitioners in the implementation of communication for development projects which use mass media in targeting women for development objectives. My analyses are broadly presented in three chapters with each chapter focusing on one research objective. Based on the data, the researcher discovered that, community radio improves the livelihoods of women in Northern Ghana by providing them with agricultural programming which teaches women new farming techniques and how to practice sustainable agriculture while improving the yield of their crops. The study also found out that community radio provides. opportunities for women to monitor how public funds meant for community development projects are allocated, disbursed, and used for their intended purposes, by creating an avenue of two-way communication and dialogue between women, their district officers, and their elected leaders. Based on the findings of the study, the researcher concludes that, it is important for development practitioners who use mass media to implement women-focused projects to conduct a contextual analysis of the communities, the women, and the identified stakeholders of the intended project because every community is unique. Whereas all women in rural areas are vulnerable and underprivileged. To some extent, their needs and preferences are different because of their different levels of education and income status. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Humanities, School of Language and Communications, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Asuman, Kofi Antwi Manfred
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Women in agriculture -- Africa -- Ghana , Agricultural development , Community radios – Ghana
- Language: English
- Type: Doctoral theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59293 , vital:62026
- Description: In the process of achieving social equity and local development in Ghana, the empowerment and improvement of the lives of women remain critical factors, because of the existing role women and girls assume in the household and larger communal setting. In Northern Ghana culture and religion have historically side-lined, and in some cases, completely excluded women from participating in the dialogues, economic and political processes that lead to, or facilitate the transformation and development of their households and communities. Even though the media has largely contributed to the discrimination and stereotype of women through how women are represented in mainstream media, the Ghanaian media, in its assumed role as the “fourth estate of the realm” has the power to explicitly advocate and implicitly frame messages which can accelerate the processes of social change, women’s empowerment and social inclusion through the community radio broadcast system (Diedong, 2017: pp. 59, 64). After 30 years of the liberalization of the Ghanaian media and 25 years after the opening of the first community radio station, there have been few studies of how community radio influences women’s empowerment, how it gives opportunity for women to participate in political processes and whether, and how, it strengthens the livelihood capabilities of women. This research was motivated by the empowerment theory and the theory of participatory development communications. The researcher also makes references to feminist media theory in his arguments about the need for women to have access to radio in order to make their own content and also listen to content produced by other women. This study adopted a mixed methods research approach and collected data through programme analysis of the sampled radio stations, focus group discussions and semi-structured interviews. After field data was collected, they were analysed in themes that focus on the objectives of this study, data is presented through thematic discourse methods in order to help the researcher draw conclusions and propose a framework to guide practitioners in the implementation of communication for development projects which use mass media in targeting women for development objectives. My analyses are broadly presented in three chapters with each chapter focusing on one research objective. Based on the data, the researcher discovered that, community radio improves the livelihoods of women in Northern Ghana by providing them with agricultural programming which teaches women new farming techniques and how to practice sustainable agriculture while improving the yield of their crops. The study also found out that community radio provides. opportunities for women to monitor how public funds meant for community development projects are allocated, disbursed, and used for their intended purposes, by creating an avenue of two-way communication and dialogue between women, their district officers, and their elected leaders. Based on the findings of the study, the researcher concludes that, it is important for development practitioners who use mass media to implement women-focused projects to conduct a contextual analysis of the communities, the women, and the identified stakeholders of the intended project because every community is unique. Whereas all women in rural areas are vulnerable and underprivileged. To some extent, their needs and preferences are different because of their different levels of education and income status. , Thesis (PhD) -- Faculty of Humanities, School of Language and Communications, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Perceptions of Kwazulu-Natal radiographers regarding the role of professional development in clinical practice
- Authors: Zulu Anelisa
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Radiography -- KwaZulu Natal , radiographers regarding
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60290 , vital:64292
- Description: Professional development in the form of continuing education is associated with professional competence and good service delivery to the patient, and this understanding of professional development applies to the radiography profession. A manager may prompt participation in professional development, or the needs of a radiography department may influence it, or it may be driven by the personal and professional ambitions of the radiographer. Participation could also be due to regulatory body requirements, which require tracking and documentation as in the case of the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA) which may audit the professional’s continuing professional development (CPD) compliance. Professional development is a concept inclusive of all learning such as CPD; postgraduate qualifications; staff development; and reflective practice, pursued for the betterment of the radiographers’ professional expertise. Few if any qualitative studies have sought to explore South African radiographers’ perceptions of professional development as a concept inclusive of all learning. The purpose of the study was to explore and describe the perceptions of KwaZulu-Natal radiographers regarding the role of professional development in clinical practice to make recommendations to radiography managers on how to optimise the participation of radiographers in professional development. Bandura’s social learning theory was used as the theoretical framework for a study of the perceptions of practising KZN radiographers regarding the role of professional development in clinical practice and exploring how people learn from one another, including concepts such as observational learning, imitation, and modelling. The target population for the study consisted of practising radiographers working in the public and private, rural and urban hospitals in KZN. Data were gathered using semi-structured one-on-one interviews and were coded using Tesch’s eight steps. The trustworthiness of this study was enhanced using Lincoln and Guba’s (1985) model of trustworthiness, namely: credibility, transferability, dependability and confirmability. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Health Sciences, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Zulu Anelisa
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Radiography -- KwaZulu Natal , radiographers regarding
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/60290 , vital:64292
- Description: Professional development in the form of continuing education is associated with professional competence and good service delivery to the patient, and this understanding of professional development applies to the radiography profession. A manager may prompt participation in professional development, or the needs of a radiography department may influence it, or it may be driven by the personal and professional ambitions of the radiographer. Participation could also be due to regulatory body requirements, which require tracking and documentation as in the case of the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA) which may audit the professional’s continuing professional development (CPD) compliance. Professional development is a concept inclusive of all learning such as CPD; postgraduate qualifications; staff development; and reflective practice, pursued for the betterment of the radiographers’ professional expertise. Few if any qualitative studies have sought to explore South African radiographers’ perceptions of professional development as a concept inclusive of all learning. The purpose of the study was to explore and describe the perceptions of KwaZulu-Natal radiographers regarding the role of professional development in clinical practice to make recommendations to radiography managers on how to optimise the participation of radiographers in professional development. Bandura’s social learning theory was used as the theoretical framework for a study of the perceptions of practising KZN radiographers regarding the role of professional development in clinical practice and exploring how people learn from one another, including concepts such as observational learning, imitation, and modelling. The target population for the study consisted of practising radiographers working in the public and private, rural and urban hospitals in KZN. Data were gathered using semi-structured one-on-one interviews and were coded using Tesch’s eight steps. The trustworthiness of this study was enhanced using Lincoln and Guba’s (1985) model of trustworthiness, namely: credibility, transferability, dependability and confirmability. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Health Sciences, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Post Pandemic Professional Practice: Dynamics and How Spatial Design, Functionality and Perceptions are Adapting
- Authors: King, Kirsty
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Built Environment -- South Africa , Pattern perception
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59476 , vital:62121
- Description: On 23 March 2020, the onset of the Covid 19 Pandemic in South Africa brought with it anxiety, uncertainty and volatility. Change was forced upon everyday life in an unprecedented way. The aim of this study was to determine how professional practices in the built environment are adapting to the forced changes from the perspective of spatial design, functionality and perception. By means of literature reviews and survey responses, insight can be obtained as to the effect of the forced changes on professional practices in South Africa. The effect of the changes and how they are being adapted to, and implemented within the built environment, becomes important, in order to fully understand such changes, from the point-of-view of quality-control mechanisms, skills and knowledge transfer and communication. A mixed-use research approach was used to gather the data; and the outcome of the study aims to identify how the forced change fully affected work-place practices and the people in them. An initial pilot questionnaire was circulated to a small group of professionals in the built environment. Following this, a web-based survey was distributed via the professional-practice governing bodies to Architects, Engineers and Quantity Surveyors within South Africa. Both professionally registered and candidate professionals were invited to participate in the survey. A low response rate of 31% was received. The data from the 47 respondents were captured on the data base. The data were then analysed by the researcher; and by a semantic approach, themes and trends were identified and assumptions were made, based on the results. The respondents identified with the forced changes; and it has emerged that the forced changes are only implemented when necessary or legislated. It was also evident that the remote working environment is not conducive to productive work flow, skills development and quality control in the built-environment sector. The study further makes recommendations, based on the objectives identified. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Engineering, the Built Environment, and Technology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: King, Kirsty
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Built Environment -- South Africa , Pattern perception
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59476 , vital:62121
- Description: On 23 March 2020, the onset of the Covid 19 Pandemic in South Africa brought with it anxiety, uncertainty and volatility. Change was forced upon everyday life in an unprecedented way. The aim of this study was to determine how professional practices in the built environment are adapting to the forced changes from the perspective of spatial design, functionality and perception. By means of literature reviews and survey responses, insight can be obtained as to the effect of the forced changes on professional practices in South Africa. The effect of the changes and how they are being adapted to, and implemented within the built environment, becomes important, in order to fully understand such changes, from the point-of-view of quality-control mechanisms, skills and knowledge transfer and communication. A mixed-use research approach was used to gather the data; and the outcome of the study aims to identify how the forced change fully affected work-place practices and the people in them. An initial pilot questionnaire was circulated to a small group of professionals in the built environment. Following this, a web-based survey was distributed via the professional-practice governing bodies to Architects, Engineers and Quantity Surveyors within South Africa. Both professionally registered and candidate professionals were invited to participate in the survey. A low response rate of 31% was received. The data from the 47 respondents were captured on the data base. The data were then analysed by the researcher; and by a semantic approach, themes and trends were identified and assumptions were made, based on the results. The respondents identified with the forced changes; and it has emerged that the forced changes are only implemented when necessary or legislated. It was also evident that the remote working environment is not conducive to productive work flow, skills development and quality control in the built-environment sector. The study further makes recommendations, based on the objectives identified. , Thesis (MA) -- Faculty of Engineering, the Built Environment, and Technology, 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
Protection of the environment from pollution emanating from offshore oil installations
- Authors: Kuture, Dudzai Chandisaita
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Marine pollution -- South Africa , Marine Law – South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59710 , vital:62383
- Description: The desperate need for South Africa to develop its oil industry is driven by the goal of improving the social and economic situation in the State. This goal has sparked an interest in expanding the exploration and exploitation of oil within the marine environment to the extent of venturing into uncharted deeper waters.1 This interest has been met with a constant reminder of the Deepwater Horizon explosion as one of the many events that stirred up concerns within the global community on the possibility of an oil spill causing pollution within the marine environment. Also, that explosion and its effects have demonstrated the need for the global community to closely monitor and effectively regulate environmental matters, including the exploration and exploitation of oil and the prevention of oil pollution.2 Therefore, the recent discovery of additional oil deposits in South Africa has confirmed the need to revisit the current legal system regulating the impact on the marine environment including the exploration and exploitation of oil.3 An oil spill causing pollution amongst other pollutants is a significant contributor to loss and damage to the marine environment and its habitat. In developing States like South Africa, an oil spill causing pollution can present challenges due to the scarcity of resources, technology, and knowledge to prepare, prevent and combat the spreading of the pollutant. As it stands, in the event of an oil spill, States must rely on international cooperation and expertise to ensure that the impact does not cause irreversible harm and degradation to the marine environment. South Africa within the global community gives effect to international law by adopting domestic laws that regulate the exploration and exploitation of oil to protect the environment from oil spills causing oil pollution within the marine environment. In addition, the liability caused by oil spills plays a vital role in the need to rehabilitate the marine environment and compensate the aggrieved parties. , Thesis (LLM) -- Faculty of Law, Department of Public law , 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12
- Authors: Kuture, Dudzai Chandisaita
- Date: 2022-12
- Subjects: Marine pollution -- South Africa , Marine Law – South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10948/59710 , vital:62383
- Description: The desperate need for South Africa to develop its oil industry is driven by the goal of improving the social and economic situation in the State. This goal has sparked an interest in expanding the exploration and exploitation of oil within the marine environment to the extent of venturing into uncharted deeper waters.1 This interest has been met with a constant reminder of the Deepwater Horizon explosion as one of the many events that stirred up concerns within the global community on the possibility of an oil spill causing pollution within the marine environment. Also, that explosion and its effects have demonstrated the need for the global community to closely monitor and effectively regulate environmental matters, including the exploration and exploitation of oil and the prevention of oil pollution.2 Therefore, the recent discovery of additional oil deposits in South Africa has confirmed the need to revisit the current legal system regulating the impact on the marine environment including the exploration and exploitation of oil.3 An oil spill causing pollution amongst other pollutants is a significant contributor to loss and damage to the marine environment and its habitat. In developing States like South Africa, an oil spill causing pollution can present challenges due to the scarcity of resources, technology, and knowledge to prepare, prevent and combat the spreading of the pollutant. As it stands, in the event of an oil spill, States must rely on international cooperation and expertise to ensure that the impact does not cause irreversible harm and degradation to the marine environment. South Africa within the global community gives effect to international law by adopting domestic laws that regulate the exploration and exploitation of oil to protect the environment from oil spills causing oil pollution within the marine environment. In addition, the liability caused by oil spills plays a vital role in the need to rehabilitate the marine environment and compensate the aggrieved parties. , Thesis (LLM) -- Faculty of Law, Department of Public law , 2022
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2022-12