Results for 'South Africa '

981 found
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  1. Linguistic markers of recovery: semantic, syntactic and pragmatic changes in the use of first person pronouns in the course of psychotherapy.van Staden - South Africa - 2003 - In Bill Fulford, Katherine Morris, John Z. Sadler & Giovanni Stanghellini (eds.), Nature and Narrative: An Introduction to the New Philosophy of Psychiatry. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  2. Theorising South Africa’s Corporate Governance.Andrew West - 2006 - Journal of Business Ethics 68 (4):433-448.
    South Africa's principal corporate governance report aspires to an 'inclusive' approach to corporate governance, in which companies are clearly advised to consider the interests of a variety of stakeholders. Yet, in common with many other countries, there is little discussion of the theoretical foundations and assumptions implicit in the recommended approach to corporate governance. The purpose of this article is to provide an analysis of corporate governance and the corporate environment in South Africa in terms of (...)
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  3.  21
    Mitigating South Africa’s HIV Epidemic: The Interplay of Social Entrepreneurship and the Innovation System.Michael Kahn - 2016 - Minerva 54 (2):129-150.
    With the struggle against apartheid achieved, South Africa faced the new struggle of overcoming the HIV/AIDS pandemic. This paper examines the response of government, the innovation system and civil society in rising to the challenge. The response included a fatal denialism concerning the etiology of AIDS, a fatalism that constitutes political market failure. This political market failure was counteracted through the emergence of social entrepreneurship in the form of the Treatment Action Campaign that mobilized civil society and like-minded (...)
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  4.  43
    South Africa’s Blue Dress.Eliza Garnsey - 2019 - Angelaki 24 (4):38-51.
    Inside the Constitutional Court of South Africa hangs Judith Mason’s artwork, entitled The Man Who Sang and the Woman Who Kept Silent, more commonly known as The Blue Dress. Mason created the artwork to commemorate Phila Ndwandwe and Harold Sefola after hearing testimony from the perpetrators of their deaths at the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). In this article I explore how The Blue Dress contributes to the reimagining of human rights culture in South (...)
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  5.  34
    Afrikaners in post-apartheid South Africa: Inward migration and enclave nationalism.Christi van der Westhuizen - 2016 - HTS Theological Studies 72 (4):1-9.
    South Africa's transition to democracy coincided and interlinked with massive global shifts, including the fall of communism and the rise of western capitalist triumphalism. Late capitalism operates through paradoxical global-local dynamics, both universalising identities and expanding local particularities. The erstwhile hegemonic identity of apartheid, 'the Afrikaner', was a product of Afrikaner nationalism. Like other identities, it was spatially organised, with Afrikaner nationalism projecting its imagined community onto a national territory. The study traces the neo-nationalist spatial permutations of 'the (...)
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  6.  35
    Boycotting South Africa.William H. Shaw - 1986 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 3 (1):59-72.
    ABSTRACT This essay explores the question of what sorts of relations morality permits, requires, or forbids nations, businesses, and individuals to have with South Africa and South Africans. After reflecting on the immorality of apartheid and rebutting several defences of it, the essay turns its attention to several questions that bear on the assessment of foreign policy toward South Africa. The final sections discuss how individuals ought to respond to South African apartheid, focusing on (...)
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  7. South Africa!S fruit processing industry: Competitiveness factors and the case for sector-specific industrial policy measures.Don Ross - manuscript
    The aim of this report is to consider feasible conditions under which South Africa!!" processed (e.g., canned and other packaged) fruit industry would be internationally competitive and a profitable site of investment, and therefore able to resume a pattern of growth from which it departed in the early part of the present decade. This is in service of the wider aim of identifying, in a subsequent phase of the project, appropriate industrial policy measures which Government might put in (...)
     
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  8.  2
    Church and poverty in South Africa: Historical analysis and missional ecclesiology.Christoffel B. Prinsloo & Willem A. Dreyer - 2023 - HTS Theological Studies 80 (1):9.
    Poverty remains a critical socio-economic challenge in South Africa, deeply rooted in the country’s history of colonialism and apartheid. This article examines the multifaceted role of churches in poverty alleviation efforts in South Africa, spanning both historical and contemporary contexts. Through analysis of historical records and contemporary literature, it argues that while churches have significantly addressed poverty, a more comprehensive and transformative approach is needed. The study proposes adopting a missional ecclesiology framework to enhance the effectiveness (...)
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  9.  15
    South Africa's Vaccine Roll-Out and Its Potential Costs to Our Social Contract.Christine Hobden & Heidi Matisonn - 2022 - Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory 69 (173):64-85.
    Over the COVID-19 period, much attention has been paid to the governance relationship between citizens and the state. In this article, however, we focus on a feature that is less evident in the day-to-day living of the social contract: the relationship between citizens. Because this horizontal cohesion is critical to the social contract, we suggest that it should not be neglected, even amid a deepening crisis of state–citizen relations. Using the case of South Africa's vaccine roll-out as an (...)
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  10.  24
    South Africa’s new standard material transfer agreement: proposals for improvement and pointers for implementation.Donrich W. Thaldar, Marietjie Botes & Annelize Nienaber - 2020 - BMC Medical Ethics 21 (1):1-13.
    BackgroundWhenever South African research institutions share human biological material and associated data for health research or clinical trials they are legally compelled to have a material transfer agreement in place that uses as framework the standard MTA newly gazetted by the South African Minister of Health.Main bodyThe article offers a legal analysis of the SA MTA and focuses on its substantive fit with the broader legal environment in South Africa, and the clarity and practicality of its (...)
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  11.  62
    Social Entrepreneurship in South Africa: Exploring the Influence of Environment.Diane Holt & David Littlewood - 2018 - Business and Society 57 (3):525-561.
    The influence of environment on social entrepreneurship requires more concerted examination. This article contributes to emerging discussions in this area through consideration of social entrepreneurship in South Africa. Drawing upon qualitative case study research with six social enterprises, and examined through a framework of new institutional theories and writing on new venture creation, this research explores the significance of environment for the process of social entrepreneurship, for social enterprises, and for social entrepreneurs. Our findings provide insights on institutional (...)
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  12.  33
    South Africa as postcolonial heterotopia: The racialized experience of place and space.Charles Villet - 2018 - Foucault Studies 24:12-33.
    This essay claims that heterotopia is characteristic of post-Apartheid South Africa, i.e. where heterotopia is usually the exception in society, it is the norm in South Africa. This claim reinterprets and expands Foucault’s concept: heterotopia here refers to the racialization of place and space, and hence to otherness and difference as primary. The ubiquity of heterotopia post-Apartheid is evident in the life-worlds of white suburbia and the black township. A case study is undertaken of white suburbia (...)
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  13.  25
    A fatherless South Africa: The importance of missional parenting and the role of the church.Fazel E. Freeks - 2022 - HTS Theological Studies 78 (4):9.
    This article employs descriptive and explorative methods concerning father absence and missional parenting. It identifies numerous ramifications caused by father absence and the failing role of men. Father absence has been a serious social issue in South Africa, which has become more tenacious in post-colonial South Africa because of economic reasons, untold fatherhood, refused fatherhood, fatherhood accountability, divorce and dissolution of households. This social issue influenced and affected both family and society dysfunction and created a vicious (...)
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  14.  18
    South Africa’s service-delivery crisis: From contextual understanding to diaconal response.Ignatius Swart - 2013 - HTS Theological Studies 69 (2):01-16.
    This article proceeded from the assumption that the theme of service delivery in present-day South Africa could well be qualified by the notion of 'crisis', to the extent that this qualification, from a theological perspective and on the basis of comparative social analysis, well recalls the statements in such critical and profound theological documents as The Kairos Document and Evangelical Witness in South Africa on the 'crisis' in the latter years of apartheid. The further recognition that (...)
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  15.  25
    Is South Africa ready for the future of human germline genome editing? Comparing South African law and recent proposals for global governance.T. Kamwendo & B. Shozi - 2021 - South African Journal of Bioethics and Law 14 (3):97-100.
    Over the past few years, developments in the science of precise editing of human genomes using CRISPR-Cas9 have led many countries that lack specific laws in this area, such as South Africa, to contemplate legal reform. Thaldar et al. recently published five principles to guide legal reform in SA on heritable genome editing. In a similar vein, concerns about the global impact of human germline genome editing have led to calls for a global regulatory mechanism. This is what (...)
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  16.  11
    A golden opportunity for South Africa to legislate on human heritable genome editing.D. W. Thaldar - 2023 - South African Journal of Bioethics and Law 16 (3):91-94.
    Background. South Africa (SA) currently has a golden opportunity to legislate on human heritable genome editing (HHGE), as the country is revising its assisted reproductive technology regulations. A set of sub-regulations that deals with HHGE, which could seamlessly slot into the current regulations, has already been developed. The principles underlying the proposed set of sub-regulations are as follows: HHGE should be regulated to improve the lives of the people and should not be banned; the well-established standard of safety (...)
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  17. Questioning South Africa’s ‘Genetic Link’ Requirement for Surrogacy.Thaddeus Metz - 2014 - South African Journal of Bioethics and Law 7 (1):34-39.
    South African law currently forbids those seeking to arrange a surrogate motherhood agreement from creating a child that will not be genetically related to at least one of them. For a surrogacy contract to be legally valid, there must be a ‘genetic link’ between the child created through a surrogate and the parents who will raise it. Currently, this law is being challenged in the High Court of South Africa, and in this article I critically explore salient (...)
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  18. South-Africa, the choice between reform and revolution.Kai Nielsen - 1986 - Philosophical Forum 18 (2-3):222-253.
     
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  19.  65
    South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission in Light of Ubuntu: A Comprehensive Appraisal.Thaddeus Metz - 2017 - In Mia Swart & Karin van Marle (eds.), The Limits of Transition: The South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission 20 Years on. Brill. pp. 221-252.
    I critically evaluate South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) in light of a philosophical interpretation of the southern African ethic of ubuntu. Roughly, according to this moral philosophy, an act or policy is right insofar as it honours communal relationships, ones of identifying with others and exhibiting solidarity with them. After spelling out this ethical principle and the specific kind of national reconciliation it prescribes, I show that there is a powerful justification for the TRC’s broad contours (...)
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  20.  29
    Ubuntu in Post-Apartheid South Africa: Educational, Cultural and Philosophical Considerations.Mahmoud Patel, Tawffeek A. S. Mohammed & Raymond Koen - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (1):21.
    Ubuntu has been defined as a moral quality of human beings, as a philosophy or an ethic, as African humanism, and as a worldview. This paper explores these definitions as conceptual tools for understanding the cultural, educational, and philosophical landscape of post-apartheid South Africa. Key to this understanding is the Althusserian concept of state apparatus. Louis Althusser divides the state apparatus into two forces: the repressive state apparatus (RSA); and the ideological state apparatus (ISA). RSAs curtail the working (...)
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  21.  52
    South Africa's truth and reconciliation commission: Ethical and theological perspectives.Lyn S. Graybill - 1998 - Ethics and International Affairs 12:43–62.
    This essay presents an overview of the TRC— its establishment, procedures, and operating principles — and examines the way in which the commission emphasizes forgiveness rather than retribution for past wrongs.
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  22. South-Africa, the morality of divestment.Howard McGary - 1986 - Philosophical Forum 18 (2-3):203-212.
     
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  23.  24
    Urban social movements in South Africa today: Its meaning for theological education and the church.Stephan F. De Beer - 2017 - HTS Theological Studies 73 (3).
    In the past decade, significant social movements emerged in South Africa, in response to specific urban challenges of injustice or exclusion. This article will interrogate the meaning of such urban social movements for theological education and the church. Departing from a firm conviction that such movements are irruptions of the poor, in the way described by Gustavo Gutierrez and others, and that movements of liberation residing with, or in a commitment to, the poor, should be the locus of (...)
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  24.  22
    Englishes and cosmopolitanisms in South Africa.Stephanie Rudwick - 2018 - Human Affairs 28 (4):417-428.
    Against the background of South Africa’s ‘official’ policy of multilingualism, this study explores some of the socio-cultural dynamics of English as a lingua franca (ELF) in relation to how cosmopolitanism is understood in South Africa. More specifically, it looks at the link between ELF and cosmopolitanism in higher education. In 2016, students at Stellenbosch University (SU) triggered a language policy change that enacted English (as opposed to Afrikaans) as the primary medium of teaching and learning. English (...)
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  25.  74
    Corporate Governance in South Africa.G. J. Rossouw, A. Van der Watt & D. P. Malan - 2002 - Journal of Business Ethics 37 (3):289 - 302.
    The King Report on Corporate Governance (1994) evoked unprecedented interest in corporate governance in South Africa. This does not mean that corporate governance was not an issue of concern before the release of this historical report. To the contrary, corporate governance in its broader sense has been at stake since the inception of the first publicly owned companies in South Africa. This article intends to give an overview of corporate governance in South Africa. It (...)
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  26. South Africa : health rights litigation : cautious constitutionalism.Carole Cooper - 2011 - In Alicia Ely Yamin & Siri Gloppen (eds.), Litigating health rights: can courts bring more justice to health? Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
     
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  27.  12
    Madeiran emigration to South Africa since the 1960s: A sociocultural and linguistic perspective.Naidea Nunes Nunes & Bruna Micaela Freitas Pereira - 2021 - Lodz Papers in Pragmatics 17 (1-2):175-196.
    This article focuses on a study of historical emigration from the 1960s onwards, showing the importance of intercultural interaction. Due to the poverty, hunger and precarious living conditions that existed in Madeira Island, many young people saw emigration to South Africa as a means of escaping a difficult life. Arduous jobs due to their limited qualifications, as well as legal constraints and an inability to understand the language, were just some of the barriers encountered by these emigrants. By (...)
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  28.  27
    Why Do SMEs Go Green? An Analysis of Wine Firms in South Africa.Ralph Hamann, James Smith, Pete Tashman & R. Scott Marshall - 2017 - Business and Society 56 (1):23-56.
    Studies on why small and medium enterprises engage in pro-environmental behavior suggest that managers’ environmental responsibility plays a relatively greater role than competitiveness and legitimacy-seeking. These categories of drivers are mostly considered independent of each other. Using survey data and comparative case studies of wine firms in South Africa, this study finds that managers’ environmental responsibility is indeed the key driver in a context where state regulation hardly plays any role in regulating dispersed, rural firms. However, especially proactive (...)
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  29. South Africa's Young Democracy, Ten Years On: Guest Editor's Introduction.Ahmed C. Bawa - 2005 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 72 (3):vii - xviii.
     
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  30.  11
    (1 other version)South Africa: Consociation or Democracy?R. Taylor - 1990 - Télos 1990 (85):17-32.
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  31.  9
    South Africa - Terrifying Stories of Faith from the Political Boiling Pot of the World.Tony Balcomb - 1994 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 11 (2):1-5.
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  32.  12
    7. South Africa: After The Rainbow.Michael Ignatieff - 2017 - In The Ordinary Virtues: Moral Order in a Divided World. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. pp. 167-195.
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  33.  28
    South Africa's Negotiated Transition: Democracy, Opposition, and the New Constitutional Order.Ian Shapiro & Courtney Jung - 1995 - Politics and Society 23 (3):269-308.
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  34. South africas contribution to philosophy.John Hund - 1988 - South African Journal of Philosophy-Suid-Afrikaanse Tydskrif Vir Wysbegeerte 7 (3):181-182.
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  35.  18
    South Africa and the Political Imagination.Peter Milward - 1998 - The Chesterton Review 24 (1/2).
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  36.  37
    South Africa.Ward E. Jones & Alexis Tabensky - 2009 - The Philosophers' Magazine 45:40-44.
  37.  13
    South Africa's second liberation: How to make reconstruction and development work.P. De Kock - 1995 - HTS Theological Studies 51 (3).
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  38.  17
    Gendered citizenship: South Africa's democratic transition and the construction of a gendered state.Gay W. Seidman - 1999 - Gender and Society 13 (3):287-307.
    The tendency for abstract theorists of democratization to overlook gender dynamics is perhaps exacerbated in the South African case, where racial inequality is obviously key. Yet, attention to the processes through which South African activists inserted gender issues into discussions about how to construct new institutions provides an unusual prism through which to explore the gendered character of citizenship. After providing an explanation for the unusual prominence of gender concerns in South Africa's democratization, the article argues (...)
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  39.  35
    Church-state relations in South Africa, Zambia and Malawi in light of the fall of the Berlin Wall.Paul Gundani - 2018 - HTS Theological Studies 74 (1):1-9.
    The fall of the Berlin Wall in October 1989 bears a striking resonance with the biblical fracturing of the curtain in the Jerusalem temple. It presaged the death of the post-war dispensation of Church-state relations characterised by a Church that was, in the main, subservient, acquiescent and complicit to the apartheid regime in South Africa, as well as the oppressive one-party state regimes north of the Limpopo. As the Berlin Wall collapsed, the dispensation characterised by either neutrality or (...)
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  40.  38
    Regulation of Biobanks in South Africa.Pamela Andanda & Sandra Govender - 2015 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 43 (4):787-800.
    The ongoing efforts to establish biobanks in Africa envisage the availability of biological samples and data in accordance with relevant national legislation and ethical principles. Current literature has established that many African countries “do not have national legislation or guidelines on the use of stored biological samples” or if such guidelines are in place, then “disparities exist in relation to informed consent and export and import requirements.” In this regard, this article considers the extent to which the available legal (...)
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  41. Two South Africas: Social-Polit. and Cultural Role of the Rep. of South Africa in the Afr.Ab Davidson - forthcoming - Continent. M.
  42.  45
    Great Expectations: Teaching Ethics to Medical Students in South Africa.Kevin Gary Behrens & Robyn Fellingham - 2013 - Developing World Bioethics 14 (3):142-149.
    Many academic philosophers and ethicists are appointed to teach ethics to medical students. We explore exactly what this task entails. In South Africa the Health Professions Council's curriculum for training medical practitioners requires not only that students be taught to apply ethical theory to issues and be made aware of the legal and regulatory requirements of their profession, it also expects moral formation and the inculcation of professional virtue in students. We explore whether such expectations are reasonable. We (...)
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  43.  14
    Police integrity in South Africa.Sanja Kutnjak Ivković - 2020 - New York City: Routledge. Edited by Adri Sauerman, Andrew Faull, Michael E. Meyer & Gareth Newham.
    Policing in South Africa reached notoriety for its extensive history of oppressive law enforcement. In 1994, as the country's apartheid system was replaced with a democratic order, the new government faced the significant challenge of transforming the South African police force into a democratic police agency-the South African Police Service (SAPS)-that would provide unbiased policing to all the country's people. More than two decades since the initiation of the reforms, it appears that the SAPS has rapidly (...)
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  44.  18
    Executive Remuneration in South Africa: Key Issues Highlighted by Shareholder Activists.Suzette Viviers - 2015 - African Journal of Business Ethics 9 (1).
  45.  12
    Benefit‐sharing with human participants in health research in South Africa: A call for clarity.Claude Kamau, Larisse Prinsen & Donrich Thaldar - forthcoming - Developing World Bioethics.
    This study critically examines the concept of benefit‐sharing in the context of health research involving human participants in South Africa, identifying a significant gap in the precision and application of terminology. It introduces a new terminological framework designed to provide clarity and facilitate standardisation in both national and international discourse on benefit‐sharing. The analysis extends to the complex legal landscape in South Africa, highlighting the nuances of mandated, permitted, and prohibited practices of benefit‐sharing across various statutes. (...)
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  46.  8
    Zimbabwe's Migrants and South Africa's Border Farms: The Roots of Impermanence.Maxim Bolt - 2015 - Cambridge University Press.
    During the Zimbabwean crisis, millions crossed through the apartheid-era border fence, searching for ways to make ends meet. Maxim Bolt explores the lives of Zimbabwean migrant labourers, of settled black farm workers and their dependants, and of white farmers and managers, as they intersect on the border between Zimbabwe and South Africa. Focusing on one farm, this book investigates the role of a hub of wage labour in a place of crisis. A close ethnographic study, it addresses the (...)
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  47.  2
    Uncovering memory: filming in South Africa, Germany, Poland and Bosnia/Herzegovina.Tanja Sakota - 2023 - Johannesburg, South Africa: Wits University Press.
    The book is an interdisciplinary work shaped around films made by different workshop participants using film to access personal interpretations of space and place. It is focused on interacting and engaging with remembering through different memory sites.Travelling along a timeline of memory Tanja Sakota takes us on a journey through South Africa Germany Poland and Bosnia/Herzegovina. Using a camera and short film format Sakota hosts several workshops in different countries focused on interacting and engaging with remembering through different (...)
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  48. Philosophies of Education and their futures, in South Africa.Dominic Griffiths - forthcoming - Journal of Philosophy of Education.
    Philosophy of Education in South Africa during the latter half of the 20th century was characterised by three ideological strands. The first was known as ‘Fundamental Pedagogics’, the second ‘Liberalism’, and the third ‘Liberation Socialism’ (i.e., Marxism/Freire). When apartheid formally ended in 1994 these strands lost their impetus and faded from educational debates, arguably because of the disappearance of apartheid itself, as the locus relative to which these ideological strands positioned themselves. This paper characterises these three positions and (...)
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  49.  76
    (1 other version)Interventionism, authoritarianism, and the liberal state in South Africa.Pieter Coetzee - 2002 - Philosophia Africana 5 (2):53-70.
    The liberal constitution in South Africa, which entrenches a certain kind of socio-economic organisation, renders systems of socio-economic organisation traditional to Africa, dysfunctional. These traditional communitarian systems contain within themselves structures endorsing harmony, mutuality and reciprocity as ground rules or values which distribute significant resources (both material and moral) to all agents in accordance with their socially determined deserts. The absence of these structures in South Africa contributes to a condition, inflamed by liberal structures, of (...)
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  50. South-Africa revisited.F. Parker - 1972 - Journal of Thought 7 (3):187-195.
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