Doctoral Degrees (Centre for Development Support)

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  • ItemOpen Access
    The contribution of informal settlement upgrading to the economic inclusion of the poor
    (University of the Free State, 2024) Mmbadi, Elelwani; Marais, J. G. L.; Napier, M.; Visagie, Justin
    This thesis investigated the contribution of informal settlement upgrading to asset-building, economic inclusion of the poor, and poverty alleviation in Freedom Square, Bloemfontein, South Africa. Employing a mixed method approach, the study combined quantitative data from a longitudinal research project spanning three decades and qualitative insights gathered through interviews with 19 households purposively selected. The quantitative data analysis investigated how informal settlement upgrading has facilitated asset-building and economic integration in Freedom Square. Moreover, the thesis investigated the dynamics of intergenerational asset transfers and the role of informal settlement upgrading in fostering economic integration over generations. Understanding the importance of asset-building through housing initiatives and how these contributed to improving the overall well-being of disadvantaged households received special attention. Through in-depth qualitative interviews, the study investigated how impoverished households viewed the upgraded houses and developed assets, shedding light on their strategies, challenges, and successes in asset accumulation. Some of the selected findings of the thesis are as follows: • The upgrading of Freedom Square has resulted in significant intergenerational transfer of household assets. • Upgrading Freedom Square also increased the productive, consumer and financial assets of the households, but not household income and labour market participation. • Through employing the logistic regression model used in Chapter 6, the study found five significant key predictors contributing to households having a larger or a smaller house in Freedom Square. • Lastly, the upgraded houses meant shelter, investment, and stability to residents of Freedom Square. This thesis concluded that policy debates in South Africa need to consider a more nuanced classification of the welfare state theory characteristics. Furthermore, states need not overemphasise asset-based and income-based welfare as they have limitations. This research also showed that upgrading the Freedom Square informal settlement contributed to asset accumulation in ways different from those proposed by Moser. Furthermore, the intergenerational transfer of household assets from first-generation to second-generation settlers is an important creator of assets. Lastly, the study highlighted that asset integration is paramount for households to build assets and move out of poverty successfully.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Institutional responses to mine closure in the West Rand
    (University of the Free State, 2023) Kusambiza-Kiingi, Margaret Ann; Marais, J. G. L.; Gbadegesin, J.
    This study investigated the social consequences of mine closures in the West Rand. The West Rand was once a rapidly growing area but has been severely affected by mine decline and closure, with its economy shrinking by 27% between 1996 and 2018. By using the concepts of new institutional economics (NIE), shrinking cities and mine closure, the study analysed the institutional environment (formal and informal rules) and institutional change in the West Rand. The study analysed decisions taken by key role players (communities, mining companies, government) in response to mine closures. Mining operations are well known for creating dependencies and complex networks, which disintegrate at the time of mine closure. Although mining has been a significant economic driver for over 100 years in South Africa, government only introduced the first firm mine closure regulations in 1991. Currently, South Africa has 6 100 abandoned mines, which are associated with numerous environmental and social problems; about 600 abandoned mines are in Gauteng province. While most studies focus on understanding and developing regulations to address the environmental impacts of mining globally, social aspects receive less attention. Consequently, mining companies and governments lack understanding of the real cost of mine closures and a holistic and sustainable way of closure. The study found that the West Rand is grappling with the complex phenomenon of mine closure and related power dynamics, which is exacerbated by high levels of poverty and unemployment. Critical drivers of effective collaboration between key role players, and crucial aspects of effective mine closure processes are weak or missing. Weak institutions prevail due to gaps in the regulations, a lack of capacity in government to enforce rules, and corrupt practices that have infiltrated societal behaviour. As noted by NIE, formal rules may change quickly, but informal rules change slowly. A culture of mistrust lingers postapartheid, and communities continue to bear the brunt of weak institutions. Social and labour plans are not the ideal mechanism for poor and declining environments such as the West Rand, necessitating a reconsideration of a model that is appropriate for the local context. The study emphasises the importance of participatory planning to address the negative consequences of urban shrinkage. The study recommends that the government should reinforce institutions to collaborate to achieve effective mine closures and strengthen its capacity to enforce mine closure rules and eliminate corruption. It is also essential to empower communities to participate in mine closure processes, articulate their interests, pick up the broken pieces, restore what has been damaged, hold duty bearers accountable and drive their development processes.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Women’s economic empowerment programmes in reducing intimate partner violence in Zimbabwe
    (University of the Free State, 2023) Mutsikiwa, Eziwe; Manomano, Tatenda
    This study sought to explore Women’s Economic Empowerment (WEE) programmes implemented in Zimbabwe with the key objective of reducing Intimate Partner Violence (IPV). The study established that WEE programmes are increasingly being used as a tool for reducing IPV and could thus serve as a framework within which WEE programmes can be improved with the goal of reducing IPV in Zimbabwe. This novel single-embedded case study on WEE and IPV was underpinned by empowerment, capability, and liberal feminist and modernity theories. Zimbabwe was purposively selected to provide a better understanding of why IPV cases are increasing in the wake of the implementation of WEE interventions embedding IPV reduction across the country. Methodologically, the sample included women who had been or were participating in WEE programmes at the time of the study, WEE implementing agencies, WEE programme funders, and government departments. Primary and secondary data were gathered using a questionnaire survey, semi-structured interviews, and document analysis. The data were analysed using descriptive statistics, the Multinomial Logistic Regression Model (MLRM) and thematic analysis. The study established that the root cause of IPV in Zimbabwe is linked to household finances, leading to financial tension between intimate partners. However, this root cause is sometimes, exacerbated by socio-cultural and religious factors within the participants’ context. In practice, access to finances is the key factor that the livelihood component of WEE interventions has been trying to strengthen and the relationship between the variables has been found to be statistically significant and contributing positively towards the reduction of IPV. Sustainable livelihoods are believed to be critical in the reduction of IPV if coupled with relevant training, adequate funding, and well-structured partnerships between implementing agencies. The sustainability of livelihoods has however, remained a pipedream in Zimbabwe as is the case in most developing countries in Africa. The study recommends refinement of existing national policies, statutes, and instruments taking into account the local context relative to the causes of IPV. In addition, innovation towards improving sustainability of financial and technical support to existing WEE programmes must also be prioritised. Funding agencies are further encouraged to avail more funding towards research as well as WEE-related Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) to ensure challenges are timely identified. Then, partnerships among agencies implementing WEE programmes with IPV reduction objectives must be strengthened to avoid duplicating certain activities whilst neglecting other important activities and actions. Beneficiaries are encouraged to identify champions among themselves who can lead in re-examining and strengthening women's associations, networks, and movements at every level of society. In conclusion, the study theoretically contributes to a WEE-strengthening framework that can be used in practice to reduce incidences of IPV.
  • ItemOpen Access
    University community partnerships for climate change adaptation in Malawi: a human development perspective
    (University of the Free State, 2023) Phiri, Chimwemwe; Mathebula, Mikateko; Kibona, Bertha; Walker, Melanie
    Although higher education can play a catalytic role in the attainment of Sustainable Development Goal 13 (climate action), there is less attention given to the role of universities in achieving climate adaptation through partnerships with local communities. In the Malawian context, universities have been credited for partnering with local communities as a pathway towards designing context-specific climate adaptation strategies. For instance, five of the six universities in Malawi are recognised by the government as actively engaged in climate change mitigation and adaptation initiatives. However, despite these partnerships, there is a lack of evidence on what they look like in practice, what they can achieve, and whether they create an enabling environment for advancing strategies that are driven by local communities and that advance community well-being. Community well-being is conceptualised from the human development approach as the ultimate goal of development, where communities can be or do what they value in order to flourish. Drawing from the human development paradigm, this study investigates how universities contribute to improving vulnerable communities' adaptation to climate change in Malawi through university-community partnerships. Data from this qualitatively-designed case study of Lilongwe University of Agriculture and Natural Resources in Malawi was collected through semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions. University lecturers (10), support staff (2), third-year students (10), community members (18), policymakers (4) and climate change experts (2) participated in this study. The findings show that university-community partnerships in Malawi, and in Africa more broadly, have the potential to positively influence how global development challenges such as climate change are defined, understood, and addressed in ways that are contextually sensitive. The findings also offer contrasting and critical views, suggesting that while partnerships can enhance sustainable community well-being, they seldom achieve this. This is because partnerships can stimulate innovative ideas for adaptation strategies and capacitate university and community members to broaden opportunities for generating income and to widen their skill set for addressing climate change, but they do not offer adequate space for bottom-up initiatives or allow for inclusive decision-making. These partnerships also tend to advance university interests at the expense of creating more equitable outcomes for local communities. Thus, the study considers what university-community partnerships might look like if they were to be more inclusive and equitable. It identifies four key dimensions of a human development-centred framework: 1) equitable relationships; 2) inclusive decision-making; 3) streamlining resource efficiency; and 4) sustainable community well-being. The study further makes a case for harnessing the role of bounded agency across the four dimensions, as structural and institutional arrangements can affect the interplay of individual motivations for undertaking interventions. Drawing from this framework, implications for the initiation and implementation of future university-community partnerships in sub-Saharan Africa are considered.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Child guides of visually impaired parent beggars in Zimbabwe
    (University of the Free State, 2023) Mushonga,Mavis; Manomano, T.
    Zimbabwe is experiencing an economic crisis and increased street begging has resulted. Consequently, there has been an increase in the use of minor children guiding visually impaired parent beggars. The study explores the experiences of child guides who beg with and on behalf of their visually impaired parents, through the perspectives of the visually impaired parent beggars. The child guides miss opportunities and freedoms in the process of begging. Child guides need to be assisted to enhance their opportunities, capabilities and freedoms (to act as agents in making choices from the many opportunities available to all the children) as an alternative to guiding their visually impaired parent beggars in Zimbabwe’s streets. This intrinsic multiple case qualitative study researched the visually impaired parent beggars and key informants (social workers) to provide insights into the begging experiences of the child guides. A sample of ten visually impaired parent beggars, ten child guides and three social workers was purposively selected for collecting (generating) data through interviews and observations. The data generation was guided by the descriptive and interpretive phenomenological reporting methods which were this study’s methodology and research process. Thematic analyses guided the process of identifying and understanding the recurring data patterns and relationships that were relevant to answering the study’s research questions. Consequently, the findings of the study were guided by the emerging themes. The main findings revealed the impact guided begging has on the child guides and the interventions that can be applied to free them from begging. Factors, such as poverty, deprived and socially excluded child guides from a range of capabilities when begging with and on behalf of their visually impaired parent beggars. These deprivations are related to specific rights which constitute missed opportunities or capabilities and freedoms such as education, health (rest), leisure, play and recreation. It was also found that the child guides failed to enhance their capabilities and opportunities or child rights through interdependence with others. Thus, the deprivations were detrimental to the child guides’ wellbeing and development. Hence, it was argued that the child guides needed the application of the capability approach which sees development as possible through Ubuntu/Hunhu: interdependence with others, so that they are not socially excluded from various functions of society. The study made some recommendations which were directed at the government, particularly the Department of Social Development and Harare City Council. The recommendations centred on satisfying the needs of child guides and were grounded on the capabilities approach and Ubuntu/Hunhu (An African theory of humaneness) inspired by social inclusion model to ensure that child guides were not socially excluded from their beings and doings.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Assessment of broad-based black economic empowerment compliance in enterprise and supplier development through the capability approach
    (University of the Free State, 2023) Mandavha, Ndovhatshinyani; Neneh, Brownhilder
    Since the advent of democracy, the South African government has held transformation and empowerment at the helm of its objectives. The Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment (B−BBEE) policy has been instrumental in the drive towards the transformation and empowerment of black people, particularly in business. The introduction of the B−BBEE Codes of Good Practice in 2007 was set to deliver on the key areas of the economy that the government had prioritised for transformation and empowerment. Government amended the BBBEE Codes of Good Practice in 2013 to strengthen implementation and fast-track transformation and empowerment. Although the small, medium and micro enterprises (SMMEs) have always been regarded as instrumental to economic growth, the 2013 Codes placed emphasis on the support and inclusion of black-owned SMMEs through the enterprise and supplier development code. Enterprise and supplier development requires collaboration between the government, corporates and SMMEs because they are the key role players. This study focused on the amended 2013 B−BBEE Codes of Good Practice, specifically the enterprise and supplier development code that came into effect in May 2015. The study analysed the implementation of enterprise and supplier development through the capability approach to understand the challenges and the perceptions of the government, corporates and SMMEs regarding enterprise and supplier development. The capability approach of Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum presents ideas that expand beyond traditional economic thinking and focuses on what human beings can achieve. The capability approach was found suitable for exploring whether B−BBEE enterprise and supplier development can and would potentially increase capabilities among corporates and SMMEs, in particular black-owned SMMEs. Existing literature in B−BBEE emphasises that the intentions of B−BBEE as a transformation and empowerment policy are to broaden empowerment and ensure economic inclusiveness. However, B−BBEE is faced with many challenges. The study applied mixed methods research; qualitative data was collected through semi-structured interviews, whereas quantitative research employed a survey. Data was collected in South Africa. Qualitative data was collected from two different population groups: the government and corporates. Semi-structured interviews were held with two government officials from Gauteng, whereas 20 corporates in the manufacturing sector were interviewed from Gauteng, Mpumalanga and the Western Cape province. The survey was issued to SMMEs operating in the manufacturing sector in Gauteng, Mpumalanga, North-West, Western Cape, Northern Cape, KwaZulu-Natal, and the Eastern Cape provinces. Non-probability sampling was used for the qualitative research, whereas respondents for the quantitative research were selected using simple random sampling. Qualitative research findings from the government indicated that government was cognisant that implementing B−BBEE, particularly enterprise and supplier development, would not be easy because corporates must use their resources in the implementation, and SMMEs need to be well positioned to benefit meaningfully. Qualitative findings from corporates indicated that there was a high B−BBEE compliance with enterprise and supplier development and that corporates aimed at maintaining their level of B−BBEE compliance. In contradiction to the high levels of compliance depicted by corporates, quantitative research findings from SMMEs indicated that the majority of SMMEs had not benefited from enterprise and supplier development. This depicts that the status quo for black-owned SMMEs has not improved; SMMEs still face many of the operational challenges that enterprise and supplier development intends to address.
  • ItemOpen Access
    The urban livelihoods of informal sector practitioners in Harare
    (University of the Free State, 2023) Tanyanyiwa, Vincent Itai; Marais, J. G. L.; Du Plessis, Lyndon
    Street trading is critical for urban-based livelihoods, especially with increasing urbanisation and limited jobs in the formal sector. Vendingscapes are socioeconomically and politically contested lived-in spaces with repression and violent occurrences. Studies that look at street trading have tended to focus on the economic and monetary aspects of the sector. This study is unique because it investigates the value of the sustainable livelihoods approach, a framework commonly applied in rural contexts to explore street traders shaping their livelihoods within macroeconomic and regulatory uncertainties. The focus is on the lived experiences and responses to government brutality. The five sustainable livelihood approach tenets – the vulnerability context, assets, policies, institutions, processes (PIPs), livelihood strategies, and livelihood outcomes – were analysed from the street traders’ perspective. The study used a case study design with a qualitative approach. The data collection techniques included key informant interviews, semi-structured interviews to allow vendors to express their lived experiences, non-participant observation, systematic actions and behaviours measurement and archival data analysis, including policy analysis. Thematic data analysis occurred throughout the study, showing emerging patterns and relationships. The study concluded that street trading in Harare is thriving amid an intensifying everyday struggle. Vendors are becoming more uncertain and vulnerable as Zimbabwe sinks into socioeconomic turmoil due to foreign currency crises, increasing isolation, poverty, runaway inflation, tax evasion and unemployment, among many challenges that increase the vulnerability context and informality. Zimbabwe should enact informal sector-specific legislation as vendors show their agency by minimising the risks of arrest and confiscating goods. The study’s main contribution is a detailed analysis of vendors’ livelihood strategies that circumvent government brutality.
  • ItemOpen Access
    The capabilities of male migrant miners in preventing and managing HIV: A Lesotho case study
    (University of the Free State, 2022) Nako, Esther Makuena; Marais, J. G. L.; Engelbrecht, M. C.
    Previous research has shown multiple HIV programmes at the mines and in Lesotho. However, despite the availability of these HIV programmes, Lesotho migrant miners who work in South Africa's mines are still plagued by HIV and are amongst the worst-hit groups. Evidence in the literature suggests fragmentation and ineffectiveness in HIV prevention and management strategies for Lesotho migrant miners. Other literature suggests that the ineffectiveness of the HIV prevention and management strategies results from irrelevant theoretical approaches that do not consider aspects of development in HIV prevention and management. This study used a qualitative approach, underpinned by the capabilities approach framework, to explore the capabilities of Lesotho male migrant miners working in the Free State mines in South Africa in preventing and managing HIV. The Capabilities Approach (CA) is a social justice theory founded by Economist-philosopher Amartya Sen in the 1980s. Fifty returning Lesotho migrant miners (those visiting home) who work in the Free State Province, South Africa and were either HIV positive or negative participated in the study. Data were collected in July 2021 on the streets of Maseru, Lesotho. Structured interviews with open-ended questions using purposive, snowballing and street outreach methods were used. The interviews were audio-taped, transcribed and translated into English and thematic analysis was used as the method of data analysis. The study concluded that structural factors like the culture at the mines that accept commercial sex often lead to the miners losing control over their daily lives, constricting their capability to prevent HIV. Other structural factors like policies, healthcare quality and the miners' circular migration patterns have characteristics that either expand or constrict the miners' capabilities to prevent and manage HIV. The miners had adequate personal conversion factors and abundant social conversion factors. However, these conversion factors operate amid many social constraints, making the cultivation of capabilities to prevent and manage HIV difficult. The miners' environmental conversion factors were inadequate, particularly those related to accessing ARVs in the mines, denying them some basic freedoms and entitlements. Finally, the miners engage in functionings that either expand or constrict their capabilities to prevent and manage HIV. For those who are HIV positive, functionings like being stigmatised and enduring the side-effects of ARVs, negatively affects their psychological, physical and social wellbeing.
  • ItemOpen Access
    The capabilities of male migrant miners in preventing and managing HIV: a Lesotho case study
    (University of the Free State, 2022) Nako, Esther Makuena; Marais, J. G. L.; Engelbrecht, M.
    Previous research has shown multiple HIV programmes at the mines and in Lesotho. However, despite the availability of these HIV programmes, Lesotho migrant miners who work in South Africa's mines are still plagued by HIV and are amongst the worst-hit groups. Evidence in the literature suggests fragmentation and ineffectiveness in HIV prevention and management strategies for Lesotho migrant miners. Other literature suggests that the ineffectiveness of the HIV prevention and management strategies results from irrelevant theoretical approaches that do not consider aspects of development in HIV prevention and management. This study used a qualitative approach, underpinned by the capabilities approach framework, to explore the capabilities of Lesotho male migrant miners working in the Free State mines in South Africa in preventing and managing HIV. The Capabilities Approach (CA) is a social justice theory founded by Economist-philosopher Amartya Sen in the 1980s. Fifty returning Lesotho migrant miners (those visiting home) who work in the Free State Province, South Africa and were either HIV positive or negative participated in the study. Data were collected in July 2021 on the streets of Maseru, Lesotho. Structured interviews with open-ended questions using purposive, snowballing and street outreach methods were used. The interviews were audio-taped, transcribed and translated into English and thematic analysis was used as the method of data analysis. The study concluded that structural factors like the culture at the mines that accept commercial sex often lead to the miners losing control over their daily lives, constricting their capability to prevent HIV. Other structural factors like policies, healthcare quality and the miners' circular migration patterns have characteristics that either expand or constrict the miners' capabilities to prevent and manage HIV. The miners had adequate personal conversion factors and abundant social conversion factors. However, these conversion factors operate amid many social constraints, making the cultivation of capabilities to prevent and manage HIV difficult. The miners' environmental conversion factors were inadequate, particularly those related to accessing ARVs in the mines, denying them some basic freedoms and entitlements. Finally, the miners engage in functionings that either expand or constrict their capabilities to prevent and manage HIV. For those who are HIV positive, functionings like being stigmatised and enduring the side-effects of ARVs, negatively affects their psychological, physical and social wellbeing.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Early childhood male medical circumcision
    (University of the Free State, 2022) Palmer, Eurica; Marais, J. G. L.; Engelbrecht, M.
    Medical male circumcision studies concerning decision-making often focus on acceptability and feasibility among parents, with limited application of theoretical frameworks. The involvement of Black women in medical male circumcision policies and programmes has received limited attention. The research investigated infant and child male circumcision (ICMC) decision-making in South Africa and analysed the different perspectives and debates. Furthermore, the study focused on ICMC as an HIV prevention strategy. The constructs of three theoretical frameworks, including the Social Constructivism Theory, Ecological Systems Theory, and Social Norms Theory, were applied across three independent articles. In-depth interviews were conducted to collect data from parents, Black women, and a young male participant who has undergone traditional male circumcision to determine their experiences of ICMC decision-making in the Diepsloot and Diepkloof areas in Gauteng, South Africa. The data analysis was conducted using a thematic and framework analysis. The findings showed that policy positions do not reflect the social contexts, including social sanctions, the social network, and the social construction of masculinity prevalent in ICMC decision-making. The results showed that the involvement of Black women in medical male circumcision policies and programmes should be central as men dominate ICMC decisions and women are on the periphery of the decision-making process.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Dependencies and decentralised government for the governance of housing delivery in Mangaung
    (University of the Free State, 2022) Mokoena, Malefetsane Daniel; Marais, J. G. L.; Masithela, N.; Venter, A.
    This thesis investigates dependencies and decentralised government for the governance of housing delivery in Mangaung over three decades. Housing governance remains a challenge to most local authorities. The study uses the evolutionary governance theory to conceptualise the research and understand the concepts of housing governance and the evolution of housing policy over time. This thesis relies on data collected from semi-structured interviews and policy documents and uses the evolutionary governance theory to show evidence of path, goal and interdependencies in housing governance in Mangaung with adverse results. Accordingly, the thesis brings forward a unique contribution to housing delivery scholarly work, emphasising some underlying dependencies in housing governance.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Self-initiated strategies for labour market integration among tied migrants in South Africa
    (University of the Free State, 21-Nov) Zinatsa, Farirai; Saurombe, Musawenkosi Donia; Matebesi, Sethulego
    South Africa is a hub for migration in sub-Saharan Africa and a prominent reservoir of migratory flows within and beyond the Southern African Development Community (SADC). Since the early 2000s, this skills-constrained country has implemented policies to harness the talents of skilled migrants for economic growth and development. On the part of migrants, the decision to emigrate represents an opportunity to improve their social and economic well-being and support their families back home in remittances. Skilled female migrants emigrating within the context of family as accompanying spouses (also known as tied migrants) remain obscured, particularly in the Global South, where the image of a skilled migrant is typically regarded as male. Tied migrants face multiple disadvantages that impact their ability to integrate themselves in the labour market in host countries. In the absence of support, they must devise their own strategies for LMI. Extant research on the labour market integration (LMI) of these migrants focuses mainly on the experiences of those who emigrate from the Global South to the Global North. Not much is known about the LMI of tied migrants who emigrate from one developing country to another, that is, within the Global South. This knowledge is essential in the context of the growing significance and magnitude of south-to-south migratory flows. Therefore, this thesis sought in-depth elucidation of how tied migrant outcomes concerning labour market integration are shaped by overarching power relations mediated by multiple axes of advantage or disadvantage. It also sought to understand how tied migrants resisted these governing technologies to fulfil their own aspirations. This study applied the theory of governmentality, and intersectionality as a heuristic device that enabled a comprehensive, multilevel analysis incorporating micro, meso and macro factors impacting the labour market integration (LMI) of tied migrants in South Africa. Data collection took place between August 2020 and February 2021. The study incorporated an interpretive/ constructionist approach or emic perspective to interrogate the lived experience of tied migrants in South Africa. A total of 13 one-on-one interviews were conducted with female tied migrants. Each interview lasted one and a half hours on average. The study set about to answer the following questions: i. What governing technologies impacted the integration of accompanying spouses into the South African labour market? ii. How did accompanying spouses attempt to overcome barriers to labour market integration in the host country? iii. How did accompanying spouses fare in the labour market? Significant findings included that self-initiated (resistance) strategies that reflect agency and a push back on governing technologies by tied migrants, can facilitate integration into the South African labour market. However, these strategies are not necessarily sufficient to guarantee full labour market integration. The broad exclusionary context which is premised on ethnicised rationalities that characterise the South African labour market makes full LMI difficult to achieve, particularly in the absence of support for integration. Tied migrants in South Africa are subjected to governing technologies such as informality, temporality, precarity and immobility, which have the cumulative impact of producing less than satisfactory labour market outcomes. Despite the adverse experiences they face, tied migrants remain agile and adept at employing various strategies at various times to maximise opportunities presented within a given space in time, even as they continue to work to secure better outcomes in the future.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Multi-dimensional student poverty at a South African university: a capabilities approach
    (University of the Free State, 18-Nov) Ruswa, Anesu Sam; Wilson-Strydom, Merridy; Walker, Melanie; Igene-Agbedahin, Adesuwa Vanessa
    The thesis contributes to work in the conceptualisation and measurement of multidimensional student poverty in South Africa through exploring and measuring multidimensional student poverty at one South African university. Although a number of studies have examined student poverty in South Africa, very few have done so using a multidimensional theoretical approach backed by a socially just and reflexive methodology. The study weighed the merits of various approaches to multidimensional poverty and advocates for the human development approach, operationalised through the capabilities approach, as the most socially just theoretical lens through which student poverty can be conceptualised and measured. One of the main objectives of the study is to design a multidimensional student poverty index based on the understandings and experiences of students at a South African university. To that end, the study adopted and adapted the Alkire-Foster methodology, augmented with the Individual Deprivation Measure, thereby making a methodological contribution through the designing and implementation of a hybrid method. An exploratory sequential mixed methods inquiry was used in the data collection, data analysis and results theorisation phases of the research. Qualitative data was collected through iterative in-depth key informant interviews (three informants interviewed twice each) and four independent rounds of guided focus groups comprising thirty-two students (eight students in each of the three initial groups, and eight in the final follow-up focus group). Participatory methods were employed to determine dimensions of student poverty. Five broad dimensions and twenty- five indicators of student deprivations were identified from the data. The dimensions of deprivations identified are basic needs, learning resources, living arrangements, participation and psychological wellbeing. The qualitative data was analysed using Nvivo software and the results informed the design of the survey questionnaire, which was administered online and by means of hard copies at a South African university using Evasys, which is an electronic survey management platform. Two thousand three hundred and six (2306) students completed the survey. STATA, R, MS-VBA, and SPSS statistical software was used to analyse the quantitative data. Over and above the results showing the incidence and intensity of student poverty, an aggregate as well as sub- group decomposed multidimensional student poverty index and indices were presented. Multiple statistical and robustness tests were also carried out to test the validity of the index. The study shows that about 18% of the all students at the case study university are multidimensionally poor. More so, male students, students on the government-funded National Students Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS), and off-campus students have the highest incidences of multidimensional poverty. The mixed methods and hybrid methodology advanced in this study offers more value than purely qualitative or quantitative techniques as it captures both the depth and breadth of student poverty. Beyond making a contribution to how multidimensional student poverty can be measured, the study makes a significant contribution to how student poverty is conceptualised and understood in general, thereby giving policy makers a different frame through which to find normative solutions to the challenge of student poverty.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Democratic capabilities research: an undergraduate experience to advance socially just higher education in South Africa
    (University of the Free State, 18-Aug) Martinez-Vargas, Carmen; Walker, Melanie; Nkhoma, Nelson; Wilson-Strydom, Merridy
    Universities are complex institutions that need to be in constant questioning and iteration to improve and serve the larger society. Nevertheless, the latest protests in the South African higher education institutions are a sign of challenging times. Protests have recognised the perpetuation of inequalities and the need to decolonise institutions. Furthermore, this debate has been ongoing within academia for decades, looking for ways to confront the colonial issues, especially in the area of knowledge production, investigating how knowledge is produced and distributed within the dominant system. Many of these concerns are related to European-Western domination over other ways of producing knowledge, jeopardising the wide range of knowledge systems in the world. This highlights the substantial importance of scrutinising how we create knowledge as scholars and how we can advance towards social justice by overcoming these persistent challenges, especially within higher education institutions in the Global South. Participatory methods, methodologies, and research processes are part of this internal intellectual project within higher education institutions trying to challenge the persistence of colonial issues. This field has developed into a fruitful and legitimate research area awash with a diversity of theoretical and practical insights, not only related to decolonisation and knowledge democratisation, but also focusing on action and participation. Nevertheless, the result has been a very diverse field that pervasively embraces various theoretical and practical perspectives, often contradictory, leading to theoretical and practical inconsistencies, incongruences and contradictions. To take up this challenge, the Capabilities Approach proposes a theoretical space to reflect and reconsider epistemological, methodological and operational issues, providing a solid people- centred theoretical frame. Moreover, participatory methods, methodologies, and research processes, have been drawing on capabilities lenses in multiple development and educational interventions. Nonetheless, this capabilities research area is still under-researched and is far from having reached its full potential. Scholars within the capabilities sphere have not yet achieved a consensual proposal such as a participatory capabilities-based research. Thus, the research questions that guided this study are: How can a participatory capabilities-based research project be conceptualised and implemented in the light of the CA and participatory approaches towards socially just higher education, given the academic gap between both fields and incongruences within participatory approaches? Which opportunities, challenges and lessons with regard to social justice and capabilities expansion emerge from a participatory capabilities-based case study with undergraduate students in South Africa towards socially-just higher education? Which capabilities do these undergraduate students have reason to value and why? Which of these capabilities are being expanded through the involvement in a participatory capabilities-based case study experience? This project innovatively conceptualises and applies this participatory capabilities-based research as ‘Democratic Capabilities Research’ (DCR). It outlines DCR as a reflexive and pedagogical space to advance more just practices, especially in the context of hierarchical knowledge practices in universities in the South, and the marginalisation of youth voices in knowledge production. The ambition is to both generate democratic and inclusive knowledge creation and advance social justice, through the theorisation and empirical exploration of a DCR case study in South Africa. Therefore, the methodology used for this research is a case study of a DCR participatory research project. This case study not only investigates the application of a DCR project but also its production throughout the project as a research outcome. The case study was developed and implemented at a previously historically advantaged Afrikaans-speaking research and teaching university in South Africa. A group of twelve volunteer undergraduate students worked as co- researchers with the doctoral research fellow over one academic year. In the process, they challenged persistent institutional hierarchies and their marginal position in university structures of knowledge production. Multiple data sources were collected over the year (2017), including individual interviews at three different stages of the DCR project, personal journals produced by each of the co-researchers and the researcher, and participant observation over the nine DCR workshops. In undertaking the case study, the project also confronted the dilemma around legitimate knowledge and legitimate forms of knowledge production. Thus, the study had to deal with the tensions of non-ideal research settings, and between producing a doctoral study and the actual practices of DCR, and how these ‘legs’ of the research both go together, yet are separate. The study shows that a participatory capabilities-based conceptualisation of a participatory research can challenge and resolve some of the actual limitations within the broad family of participatory approaches. Thus, the study presents five foundational principles for DCR to guide participatory practices. Furthermore, the study reveals that capabilities are rich sources of information to design and evaluate participatory projects such as DCR. However, the capabilities chosen to guide us should be valued capabilities by the participants and not generic capabilities lists, such as Nussbaum’s central capabilities. The findings show that valued capabilities are dynamic, latent and contextual and therefore we have good reasons to explore these specificities in order to orient our DCR participatory practice in the direction of the lives the participants have reasons to value. Additionally, the findings highlight the impact of using individual valued capabilities as evaluative frames. Presenting two student cases from among the twelve participants, the data shows that getting to know the participants before our participatory practices, understanding the way they enjoy their capabilities before the project commences, can enhance the way we assess our DCR practice by exploring functionings among their valued capabilities. In this way, the evaluative space is expanded and avoids previous paternalist frames directing our practices towards the lives the participants want to lead. Moreover, as DCR goes beyond capabilities expansion and achievement, the theorisation of DCR is presented and revised after the empirical data has been analysed in order to review the five initial principles guiding us in our capabilities-based participatory practice. The significance of this study is based on an unexplored research area linking capabilities with participatory research practices. Furthermore, the study intentionally uses an open-ended perspective of the CA that highlights its potential as a grassroots approach to provide an original and locally related research alternative in the form of DCR, towards a more just, decolonial and democratic way of knowledge creation within Global South higher education institutions.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Universities in regional development: knowledge transfer in a less favoured region
    (University of the Free State, 2013) Fongwa, Neba Samuel; Marais, J. G. L.; Atkinson, D.; Cloete, N.
    𝑬𝒏𝒈𝒍𝒊𝒔𝒉 This dissertation is an exploratory study aimed at increasing the theoretical and empirical understanding of knowledge transfer from a university to its region. The study builds on the increased emphasis on the role of universities as 'engines' for development. By using the Faculty of Agriculture at the University of the Free State, South Africa as a case study, this study aimed to provide a nuanced understand of the factors affecting knowledge transfer between academics and stakeholders in a less favoured region. By means of the learning region concept and supported by other empirical studies, key indicators were identified from the literature and were developed for investigation. A qualitative approach was followed to collect data from academics in the Faculty of Agriculture and from relevant stakeholders by means of semi-structured interviews and a detailed review of some key policy documents. Institutional data, farmer databases and an academic survey provided quantitative data with a view to facilitating the triangulation of data and the minimising of bias. Findings from the study revealed that the process of knowledge transfer from the UFS was affected by a combination of demand and supply factors. Some of the factors affecting supply included the nature and the history of the UFS and the Faculty of Agriculture, adequate incentive structures, the level of policy alignment and the embeddedness of knowledge outputs from the faculty. Demand factors included the absorptive capacity of the region, the presence of coordinated demand systems and the nature of the networks that existed between stakeholders. This thesis argues that because of institutional lock-ins in the region - that have led to path dependency in the practice of agriculture - knowledge from the faculty has failed to realise its potential in respect of contributing to regional development. While there is evidence of networks between farmers and academics, the network forms are 'distorted' and as yet strongly embedded along historical social and racial lines. There is also limited evidence of a properly institutionalised notion of engagement with emerging farmers and thus knowledge transfer continues to be path dependent. 311 The findings have implications for the UFS, for the faculty and for the region. While the UFS has defined itself as having both a national and an international agenda, the university will consciously have to define its regional role and then have to establish structures for active engagement - not only broadly but also specifically with the agricultural sector. At the faculty level, engagement needs to be reconceptualised, with engagement moving from a philanthropic ethos to one that is part of the core function of teaching and learning. At the regional level, there is a need for the establishment of new forums in which the UFS and the different stakeholders may engage. More importantly, these initiatives will have to be built on trust, social capital and networks for collective benefits to result.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Quality as human development: a case study of teaching and learning in Zimbabwean universities
    (University of the Free State, 16-Dec) Mukwambo, Patience; Walker, Melanie; Wilson-Strydom, Merridy; Loots, Sonja
    𝑬𝒏𝒈𝒍𝒊𝒔𝒉 The study contributes to work in conceptualising quality in higher education teaching and learning. Most studies focusing on quality have been from a human capital standpoint, with little examination of quality from a human development perspective, and even less focusing on the Zimbabwean context. This analytical focus on human development through the capabilities approach therefore diverges from the current emphasis on human capital. The thesis examines factors influencing the definition and conceptualisation of quality of teaching and learning in a developing country context, highlighting gaps that a human development perspective can add. Assuming that their presence are indicative of quality, I use two ideal-theoretical human development indicators namely, critical being and the capability for work. These I argue, are aspirational capabilities in the Zimbabwean context and important in higher education because of their fostering of public-good graduates concerned with human wellbeing beyond the instrumental value of education. Data for this study was collected in three phases through policy document review, observations and in-depth interviews with purposively sampled participants. Phase one comprised document review and three interviews with participants from Zimbabwe’s higher education quality assurance body, Zimbabwe Council for Higher Education. Phase two involved telephone interviews with quality assurance representatives from eight universities. Phase three was an in-depth examination of two case studies through interviews with the university representative, two deans, four lecturers and two focus group discussions with students from each “best case” department as identified by the university representative. Data was analysed thematically. Findings from the study highlight the complex interactions of contextual factors and national policy which inform and affect practice. Overall, and understandably considering the socio-political and economic climate, Zimbabwean higher education is largely influenced by human capital concerns, although there are instances of concern with human development. There is also a disjuncture between quality as policy and quality as practice with macro and meso policy makers conceptualising quality as an evaluative tool and lecturers largely interpreting it as the teaching and learning process. The results facilitate a discussion on the potential of a stronger human development influence on ideas of quality in different higher education contexts. While critical being stood as an indicator for quality, due to the prevailing socio-political economy in Zimbabwe, there was a need to revise the capability for work. Providing a global Southern interpretation of quality, the thesis argues that the conceptualisation and operationalization of quality needs to be broadened to foster human development in order to fully appreciate the role of higher education in development.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Exploring the lives and educational aspirations of marginalised migrant youth: a case study in Johannesburg, South Africa
    (University of the Free State, 2017) Mkwananzi, Wadzanai Faith; Wilson-Strydom, Merridy; Walker, Melanie; Loots, Sonja
    𝑬𝒏𝒈𝒍𝒊𝒔𝒉 As the migration phenomenon gains momentum, South Africa processes high volumes of refugee applications, particularly from neighbouring countries. One of the largest groups migrating is that of youths, in search of alternative livelihoods and opportunities in education and employment. In pursuit of these opportunities, challenges such as obtaining official documentation as well as resistance, intolerance and animosity from local residents are faced. Consequently, many unanswered questions remain on how the experiences of migrant youth influence their aspirations and desire for educational continuation or achievement. Although there are a number of studies on educational aspirations of migrant youth, most of these have focused on the Global North; there has not been an in-depth focus on individual educational aspirations of youth in the South-to-South migration context. Thus, this thesis seeks to provide additional insight into South-to-South mobility and marginalised migrant youths’ educational aspirations. Through exploring the educational aspirations and developmental opportunities available to this group of youths, I argue that the capabilities approach (CA) provides a comprehensive framework, which incorporates diverse and complex challenges of migration, cutting across and beyond social, political, cultural and economic contexts. The use of the CA in this study not only acknowledges the complex nature of migration, but also demonstrates that human mobility, in addition to being a capability on its own, is an integral part of human development. This is illustrated by an assessment of available opportunities for migrant youth to expand their choices, as well as their capacity to improve other dimensions of their lives, such as an opportunity for education. The study adopts an interpretivist paradigm, which draws on concepts that are important in understanding people’s actions and behaviours, such as agency, opportunities, and being and doing in seeking to answer the following questions: (i) what are the everyday experiences of marginalised migrant youth in Johannesburg, South Africa? (ii) What educational aspirations do the marginalised migrant youth have? (iii) Which capabilities and functionings do they value? (iv) What advocacy strategies do the participants suggest be put in place to support their educational aspirations? Data was collected using in-depth narrative interviews with 26 migrant youth who had accessed refugee services at the Central Methodist Church in Johannesburg. After preliminary open coding of individual interviews, a focus group was conducted to discuss some of the issues that emerged from individual interviews. Additional interviews were conducted with representatives from the refugee centre and Albert Street School respectively in order to gain detailed insight into migrant experiences. Two key findings emerged from this study. Firstly, resources to achieve educational aspirations for migrant youth remain constrained in all key dimensions: political, social, and economic. With these constraints, opportunities for accessing higher education also become limited. As such, these narratives on educational aspirations have also shown that a gap in the literature on marginalised migrants and education extends to other dimensions. These include issues of access, experiences within higher education institutions, as well as achievement in higher education for the few migrant youth that have opportunities to progress further in education. Secondly, aspirations are complex and multidimensional, as is the environment that shapes them. Such complexity requires an in-depth and comprehensive analysis, as a simplistic understanding may overlook the lived realities of marginalised groups. Thus, I provide a new conceptualisation of aspirations intersecting along the axes of agency and structural conversion factors. Based on this conceptualisation I present an argument for four types of aspirations, namely resigned, powerful, persistent and frustrated aspirations. This construction of aspirations provides a different way of thinking about aspirations formation in contexts of marginalisation, disadvantage and vulnerability experienced by migrant youth in the study, as well as others living in similar environments. Furthermore, the thesis presents the intersectionality of conversion factors in the migrant youths’ lives and how this intersectionality influences their educational aspirations.
  • ItemMetadata only
    The sociology curriculum, pedagogy and capabilities formation: a case study in two South African universities
    (University of the Free State, 2016) Manyonga, Bothwell; Walker, Melanie; Wilson-Strydom, Merridy; Fongwa, Sam
    𝑬𝒏𝒈𝒍𝒊𝒔𝒉 The study addresses how the sociology curriculum and pedagogy interact to enhance or constrain students’ capabilities and more broadly, human development. More specifically, the research is focussed on how curriculum knowledge acquired by undergraduate sociology students contributes to enhancing their capabilities to live and to act in society. The context is one where universities are under pressure to better align the relevance of their curriculum to the needs of the labour market, with less focus on expansive aims and more emphasis on outcomes that contribute to both economic advancement and human well-being. While the South African government has invested in the expansion of higher education enrolments and programmes for academic support, there is a need to interrogate how universities enhance or constrain individual and social well-being. Sociology has been chosen as a case subject because there is a growing concern internationally and nationally about the weakening and deepening disregard of the humanities and social sciences within the academy. Based on Sociology Departments at two South African universities, the research investigates three levels: i) curriculum level to examine what sociology knowledge is selected and why, as well as what valued doings and beings are considered important; ii) pedagogy level to explore how sociology knowledge is transmitted and how (if at all) the process expands capabilities and functionings; and iii) exit level outcomes to consider what students say they have become as a result of studying sociology. The study draws on perceptions from empirical data collected through semi-structured interviews with students (11) and lecturers (11) at each university, as well as relevant documents. The findings suggest that sociology is a subject taken by diverse students across axes of race, gender and schooling backgrounds. Although the students have different bundles of ‘resources’, the development of the curriculum fails to account for these differences but largely treats them as a homogeneous group. In this conceptualisation, there is limited or no attempt to consider the personal conversion factors that shape each student’s freedom to achieve, as well as understand the choices and values that convert these freedoms into actual achievements. Regarding valued capabilities, students and lecturers value capabilities such as knowledge and critical thinking, with the students’ having emphasis on capabilities such as economic opportunities, the opportunity to provide or experience good teaching, autonomy and voice, resilience, and recognition, respect and belonging, however, there were limited opportunities for this. All capabilities intersect and are multidimensional, thus students need all of them to achieve well-being as they reinforce and support each other. Subsequently, agency rests on the platform of these capabilities. Thus, equipping graduates with more capabilities, more well-being and more agency means higher education is more just rather than less just or is cognisant of a social justice agenda. The thesis concludes by proposing a capabilities-inspired curriculum model for human well-being. The model suggests grounds for (re)thinking policy orientations to sociology curriculum developers, particularly on how the capabilities approach and the more limited human capital theory can complement each other in higher education and curriculum development.
  • ItemOpen Access
    South African housing policy and housing policy research: theoretical discourse in the post-apartheid era
    (University of the Free State, 2017) Venter, Anita; Marais, Lochner
    𝑬𝒏𝒈𝒍𝒊𝒔𝒉 The aim of this thesis is to provide an integrated epistemological analysis of the theoretical discourse on housing policy and research implementation relevant to the South African context. Chapter 1 comprises the rationale for the thesis by emphasising that there is as yet no comprehensive study that encapsulates the theoretical foundations of housing policy research in South Africa. It is further highlighted that three decades of contemporary theoretical developments on housing in Western Europe have largely gone unnoticed in the South African scholarly environment. By drawing on the traditions of post-structuralism, social constructionism and critical discourse analysis, methodological ways of addressing inadequate theory development on housing in post-apartheid South Africa are further explored. Chapter 2 is devoted to an overview of housing theory and housing discourses in developing countries. The theoretical concepts and approaches discussed in Chapter 2 are related to the Marxist and the neo-Marxist schools of thought, neo-liberalism, development theories and to the notion of political economy. Chapter 3 is an assessment of housing theory and discourse in Western Europe and contains an extensive overview of the development of theory in the European context. Specific focus falls on welfare state theoretical developments, while the value of comparative and historical methodologies in interpreting welfare state theories is expounded. In Chapter 4, the historical development of housing policies both in Western Europe and in developing countries is outlined. Conceptual themes in this chapter centre on the dualities between formal and informal housing discourses, the application of welfare state intervention in providing housing for the poor and for the low-wage working class, and mention is made of the contested, multidimensional ideologies that feature in ownership discourses. Chapter 5 deals with the relevance of the different theoretical frameworks in re-interpreting the historical narrative and the ideological underpinnings of housing policy development in South Africa. The presence of welfare state theories within the current South African housing policy is illuminated, thereby paving the way for expansion on these theories in future scholarly discourses on housing in the post-apartheid era. In Chapter 6, social constructivism is employed to indicate how theoretical concepts on housing policy may be applied in implementation projects at grass-roots level. The case studies endeavour to provide a platform conducive to the evolvement of housing policies that will be more socially and culturally responsive than were those prior to the completion of this thesis. The outputs and contribution of this thesis aim to encourage dialogues about the value of theory, research and implementation. The thesis has generated both academic and creative outputs. The academic outputs include two accredited publications and the creative outputs comprise buildings either completed or in the process of completion. The thesis highlights the relevance of evolving indigenous cultural practices in spawning housing policy discourses for the future. By specifically embracing principles of informality, both self-help building technologies and skills transfer have significant contributions to make as regards addressing housing shortages in the country in geographical locations like the Free State Province and other rural areas.
  • ItemOpen Access
    Human and social capital formation in South Africa's arid areas
    (University of the Free State, 2012) Ingle, Mark Knightley; Visser, G. E.
    𝑬𝒏𝒈𝒍𝒊𝒔𝒉 There has been a worldwide resurgence of academic interest in semi-arid and desert regions and South Africa has proved no exception to this trend. The lion's share of South Africa's arid interior consists of the 400000 square kilometres of the Karoo. The Karoo is divided up among four provincial administrations and is therefore very rarely treated as a coherent regional entity in its own right by the central government, whose National Spatial Development Perspective (NSDP) has accorded it marginal developmental potential. Inter-provincial co-operation has also proved to be the exception rather than the rule, and this has impacted upon the Karoo's ability to present itself as an attraction on a par with Australia's Outback, for example. Until the mid-1990s the Karoo had endured several decades of being written off as a desolate, boring wasteland fit for nothing but sheep-fanning. In the 1990s, however, several major trends converged which had the effect of completely transforming the Karoo in the 'social imaginary'. These trends were the opening up of the country to international market forces and influence, consequent upon the demise of apartheid; the international reappraisal of the value of desert regions with a concomitant surge in tourism flows; the onset and rapid adoption of mobile telephony coupled with e-mail and the internet; an international revisioning of the countryside which saw primary agriculture steadily supplanted by the trappings of rural postproductivism; and a property boom which reinvigorated rural housing markets which had been stagnant for decades. Against this backdrop, at the turn of the millennium, increasing numbers of scholars sensed the emergence of a new type of individual who seemed to have evolved with a new knowledge based economy made possible by huge advances in information technology. The one constant theme running through these identifications was the concept of 'creativity' and a high premium came to be placed on the contributions of this cohort to the knowledge economy. The social order in South Africa was profoundly shaken by the combined effect of these paradigmatic changes, arguably no segment more so than that of the white community. While several hundred thousand whites emigrated, a very much smaller number, no longer able to afford coastal properties, looked with new eyes upon the potentials of small town South Africa either as prospective incomers or as sites for investment in second homes. The socio-economic chemistry of many small towns in the Karoo experienced a complete overhaul as a result of an infusion of new blood from the conurbations. This statistically insignificant but economically 'savvy' constituency then used their networks and professional expertise to set in motion what can only be described as a renaissance of the Karoo. This thesis examines aspects of this phenomenon through a lens informed by Richard Florida's influential views concerning the rise of a 'creative class'. It describes the rejuvenation of certain towns by the infusion of new social and human capital and it has considered some of the consequences of this. In-migrants have identified a wide range of 'capitals' that have been lying dormant, rather like seeds waiting for moisture. This has seen the coming-to-market of a variety of creative offerings most especially in the tourism 'value chain'. Often assisted by skillful recourse to marketing networks and to 'lifestyle media', these incomers have wrought a seachange in the social imaginary pertaining to the Karoo. The overall positive effect of this burst of industry on these small towns is proving to be both enduring and profound.