Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'South Africa C'
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Dagut, Simon Graham. "Racial attitudes among British settlers in South Africa c.1850 - c.1895." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1997. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.627404.
Full textMachado, Pedro. ""Little Madeira": the Portuguese in Woodstock c.1940-c.1980." Bachelor's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1993. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/14958.
Full textThis dissertation seeks to trace the forty-year evolution or the Portuguese or Madeiran immigrant community of Woodstock between the 1940s and 1980s. As the majority of Portuguese in Woodstock came from Madeira the terms, Portuguese and Madeiran, will be used interchangeably when referring to the immigrants. Throughout this period, Woodstock began to attract significant numbers of Portuguese immigrants, earning it the name' Little Madeira'. It became, in fact, the first suburb in Cape Town in which a distinct, Portuguese ethnic community developed .The dissertation is an attempt, however tentative, at the reconstruction of the history of the Portuguese community whilst at (he same time endeavouring to stress the importance of the contribution of sustained immigrant study to parochial and national histories.
Costa, Anthony Alec. "Segregation, customary law and the governance of Africans in South Africa, c.1919-1929." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1999. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/272699.
Full textLynas, Matthew Gibson. "The state and the making of the white settler agriculture in Natal c.1820-c.1990." Thesis, University of Aberdeen, 2012. http://digitool.abdn.ac.uk:80/webclient/DeliveryManager?pid=192257.
Full textWilkinson, Eduan. "Origin and phylodynamics of HIV-1 subtype C in South Africa." Thesis, Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/85697.
Full textENGLISH ABSTRACT: The HIV epidemic in the past couple of decades has spread at an alarming rate throughout Southern Africa. Today the region accounts for roughly one third of all HIV infections, while prevalence rates in other areas of sub-Saharan Africa remain low. In the following study, sampled sequences from Cape Town, spanning over a 21-year period were used to investigate the epidemic history of HIV, which was compared to epidemic trends across Southern Africa. Longitudinal sequence data sets were generated from stored patient samples from Cape Town through standard molecular techniques. Firstly, these sequences were used to estimate the date of origin of the HIV epidemic in Cape Town and to reconstruct a demographic history of the epidemic with advanced Bayesian inference methods. These analyses placed the estimated date of origin of the Cape Town epidemic around the mid 1960‟s with periods of strong epidemic growth observed during the mid 1980‟s and 1990‟s. Secondly, reference strains of HIV from Southern African countries were used to estimate the date of origin of the epidemic in the Southern African region. These analyses placed the date of origin of the epidemic in the Southern African region around the mid 1950‟s roughly ten years before the start of the epidemic in Cape Town/South Africa. These sequences were also used for the reconstruction of the demographic history of the epidemic in the region. A two phased growth in the HIV epidemic in the Southern African region was observed with exponential growth occurring in the mid 1980‟s and 1990‟s. Such findings are also supported by HIV prevalence estimates made by some of the leading HIV research centres and government health departments. Thirdly, a large number of homologous reference strains were used to establish the evolutionary relationship of HIV isolates from Cape Town with those from around the world. A close genetic relationship between Cape Town isolates with other South African and other Southern African isolates was observed in these analyses. Finally, large monophyletic clusters of Cape Town isolates, which was observed during the evolutionary inference, were further investigated. After detailed analyses it appears that these transmission clusters of HIV-1 have been in circulation amongst the infected population of Cape Town for several years or decades.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die MIV-epidemie het in die afgelope paar dekades teen ´n snelspoed deur Suider-Afrika versprei. Een derde van die globale MIV-infeksies kom hiér voor terwyl ander dele van Afrika aansienlik minder infeksies aantoon. Verskeie studies skryf dit toe aan onder andere: manlike besnydenis, seksuele losbandigheid, migrasie en verskeie politike faktore. Die MIV-epidemie in Suider-Afrika word deur ´n enkele subtipe van die virus oorheers (nl. MIV Subtipe C) terwyl ander subtipes sirkuleer deur die res van sub Sahara-Afrika. In die opeenvolgende studie word DNS-monsters uit Kaapstad (wat oor ´n 20 jaar tydperk strek) gebruik om die oorsprong en verloop van die epidemie te bestudeer. Die data van die Kaapstad epidemie word met die geskiedkundige verloop van die epidemie in Suider-Afrika vergelyk. Deur gestoorde bloedmonsters van Kaapstad te gebruik, was DNS-datastelle gegenereer deur middel van standaard molekulêre tegnieke. Die DNS-monsters was eerstens gebruik om die evolusionêre oorsprong en verloop van die epidemie in Kaapstad te bepaal deur Bayesiaanse Markov-ketting Monte Carlo steekproefneming. Volgense die resultate het die epidemie sy oorsprong in die 1960‟s. Klein periodes van epidemiese groei kon waargeneem word gedurende die 1980's en -90's. Die bevindings is toe vergelyk met die geskiedkundige verloop van die epidemie in Suider-Afrika. Die Suider-Afrika epidemie se oorsprong en verloop was afgelei van DNS monsters wat verkry is van publieke databasisse en die gebruik van soortgelyke Bayesiaanse metodes. Die resultate van die ondersoek het bevind dat die epidemie in Suider-Afrika in die 1950‟s ontstaan het. In vergelyking toon dit 'n stadiger liniêre groei met kort periodes van eksponensiële groei. Verder is ´n standard filogenetiese analise onderneem om die evolusionêre verwantskap van die Kaapstad-monsters te bepaal met ander MIV subtipe C isolate. Die filogenetiese steekproef toon dat die Kaapstad-monster baie nou verwant is aan ander isolate van Kaapstad, Suid-Afrika en Suider Afrika. Buiten hierdie bevindings was transmissie-bondels van MIV in Kaapstad ontdek. Na ´n deeglike verdere filogenetiese ondersoek blyk dit of die transmissie bondels al vir ´n paar dekades deur die geïnfekteerde populasie van Kaapstad sirkuleer.
Poliomyelitis Research Foundation (PRF)
Faculty of Medicine and Health of the University of Stellenbosch
National Research Foundation (NRF) of South Africa,
Mangi, Lutfullah. "U.S. policy towards South Africa, c.1960-c.1990 : from political realism to moral engagement." Thesis, SOAS, University of London, 1994. http://eprints.soas.ac.uk/28708/.
Full textShain, Milton. "The foundations of antisemitism in South Africa : images of the Jew c.1870-1930." Doctoral thesis, University of Cape Town, 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22475.
Full textHistorians of South African Jewry have depicted antisemitism in the 1930s and early 1940s as essentially an alien phenomenon, a product of Nazi propaganda at a time of great social and economic trauma. This thesis argues that antisemitism was an important element in South African society long before 1930 and that the roots of anti-Jewish outbursts in the 1930s and early 1940s are to be found in a widely-shared negative stereotype of the Jew that had developed out of an ambivalent image dating back to the 1880s. By then two embryonic but nevertheless distinctive images of the Jew had evolved: the gentleman - characterised by sobriety, enterprise and loyalty - and the knave, characterised by dishonesty and cunning. The influx of eastern European 'Peruvians' in the 1890s and the emergence of the cosmopolitan financier at the turn of the century further contributed towards the evolution of an anti-Jewish stereotype. By 1914, favourable perceptions of the Jew, associated mainly with the acculturated Anglo-German pioneer Jews, had eroded substantially and the eastern European Jew by and large defined the essence and nature of 'Jewishness'. Even those who separated the acculturated and urbane Jew from the eastern European newcomer exaggerated Jewish power and influence. Herein lay the convergence between the philosemitic and the antisemitic view. War-time accusations of avoiding military service, followed by the association of Jews with Bolshevism, consolidated the anti-Jewish stereotype. In the context of the post-war economic depression and burgeoning black radicalism, the eastern European Jew emerged as the archetypical subversive. Thus the Rand Rebellion of 1922 could be construed as a Bolshevik revolt. As eugenist and nativist arguments penetrated South African discourse, eastern European immigrants were increasingly perceived as a threat to the 'Nordic' character of South African society as well as a challenge to the hegemony of the English mercantile establishment. Nevertheless antisemitism in the crude and programmatic sense was rejected. The 1930 Quota Act ushered in a change and heralded the transformation of 'private' antisemitism into 'public' antisemitism. While this transformation was clearly related to specific contingencies of the 1930s, this thesis argues that there is a connection and a continuity between anti-Jewish sentiment, as manifested in the image of the Jew prior to 1930, and anti-Jewish outbursts and programmes of the 1930s and early 1940s. In short, anti-Jewish rhetoric at this time resonated precisely because a negative Jewish stereotype had been elaborated and diffused for decades.
Ndingaye, Xoliswa Zandile. "An evaluation of the effects of poverty in Khayelitsha: a case study of site C." Thesis, University of the Western Cape, 2005. http://etd.uwc.ac.za/index.php?module=etd&.
Full textlevel of malnutrition
rate of school drop out due to lack of food and other resources
high level of alcohol abuse
lack of basic services and the shortage of toilets etc.
Ovenstone, Georgina. "“Wars are won by men not weapons”: the invention of a militarised British settler identity in the Eastern Cape c. 1910–1965." Master's thesis, Faculty of Humanities, 2019. https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31746.
Full textWesterman, Christelle. "Work-related wellness of information technology professionals in South Africa / C. Westerman." Thesis, North-West University, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/10394/2458.
Full textWeldon, Ché. "Chytridiomycosis, an emerging infectious disease of amphibians in South Africa / C. Weldon." Thesis, North-West University, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/10394/860.
Full textThesis (Ph.D. (Zoology))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2005.
MacKinnon, Aran Stuart. "Land, labour and cattle : the political economy of Zululand, c.1930-1950." Thesis, University of London, 1996. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.243290.
Full textVandenbergh, Stefanie Josepha Emilie. "The story of a disease : a social history of African horsesickness c.1850-1920." Thesis, Stellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/2828.
Full textAfrican horsesickness is a disease endemic in Sub Saharan Africa affecting horses, a non-native species, which are extremely susceptible to this disease. Both the ‘dunkop’ form (with its dramatic high fever, laboured breathing, frothy nasal discharge and sudden death) and the ‘dikkop’ form (with its swollen head and eyes and bleeding in the membranes of the mouth and eyes) have been visited upon equine populations and their human owners in successive epidemics through the earliest colonial settlement until recent times. This thesis traces the development of veterinary science in South Africa and the effect it had on the changing ideas surrounding African horsesickness. It explores not only the veterinary progress in the country but also the impact of the progress on African horsesickness as other diseases received attention. The discussion traces the disease from one of the major epidemics ever encountered in the country, in the mid nineteenth century, to the beginning of the development of veterinary services in South Africa when little was known about African horsesickness. It illustrates the implications of a country's struggle with animal disease, the reasons for a lack of knowledge and the ramifications of the Onderstepoort Veterinary Institute’s interventions. This thesis shows that African horsesickness not only had an impact on the veterinary developments of the country but was also indirectly involved in the South African War, 1899-1902. It demonstrates the impact of disease during wartime while illustrating the importance of horses during such difficult times. Thus, this thesis draws on works on animal diseases and on social history to explore not only the effect African horsesickness had historically on equines, but the effects it had more broadly on southern African society. This study is intended to bring insight into the social history of the disease itself: how it was experienced by livestock owners and also how settler and indigenous efforts were turned towards combating this dramatic disease.
Wood, Geoffrey Thomas. "Comprehending strike action: the South African experience c.1950-1990 and the theoretical implications thereof." Thesis, Rhodes University, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003107.
Full textVermaak, Annaline. "Experiences of teachers in multicultural classrooms in ex-model c secondary schools." Thesis, Nelson Mandela University, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10948/14068.
Full textSimon, John Ian. "A study of the nature and development of orthodox Judaism in South Africa to c.1935." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16096.
Full textBibliography: pages 199-208.
This dissertation examines the manner in which Orthodox Judaism developed in South Africa from the foundation of the first congregation in 1841 up to about 1935, and considers what distinctive features, if any, characterised South African Judaism. Locating the emergence of South African Judaism within the context of Western and European Judaism, the dissertation examines the interaction which developed between those Jews who derived from Anglo-Jewry and, to a lesser extent, from German-Jewish stock, on the one hand, and those who came from Eastern Europe, particularly after 1880, on the other hand. At all times, the impact of the wider South African context on the nature of South African Judaism is considered. The harsh realities of the need to make a living in what was at, first an alien environment led to South African Jews having to abate, if not entirely abandon, the canons of strict religious observance. The dissertation examines in greater detail the main centres where the Jewish communities established themselves. Particular attention is given to Cape Town and Johannesburg where the larger communities had set themselves up, but the opportunity is also taken to examine smaller communities such as Durban, Port Elizabeth, Bloemfontein and Kimberley. There were also particular features of the so called "three digit communities", i.e. those having no more than a thousand souls, which constituted an important section of the South African Jewish community, those who settled in the smaller country towns and whose religious life took on a certain character. The dissertation then proceeds to examine the principal influences which determined how the South African Jewish community took shape. Amongst these influences were the authority of the Chief Rabbinate of the United Kingdom, which was particularly important whilst the community consisted primarily of Jews of Anglo-Jewish origin; and the way in which this influence gradually lessened as the community became more independent and as the Eastern European section began to predominate. The background and mind-sets of the Jews from Eastern Europe played a very important part in the way the community shaped itself. Other influences which were brought to bear included the Zionist movement, the internal authority of the important religious figures and institutions such, as the Ecclesiastical Courts, Batei Din, and the influence of particularly important charismatic and influential lay leaders. A fairly close examination is conducted of the most important religious leaders during the period under review. A special chapter is devoted to the issue of proselytism and the way in which it presented itself and was perceived and encountered by the South African Jewish community. The dissertation concludes with some general arguments contending for the homogeneity of the South African Jewish community; with some indication as to what identifiable characteristics it assumed and how its future would have been viewed in 1935; the comments bringing the matter up to the modern day.
Du, Toit Marijke. "Women, welfare and the nurturing of Afrikaner nationalism : a social history of the Afrikaanse Christelike Vroue Vereniging, c.1870-1939." Doctoral thesis, University of Cape Town, 1996. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/26212.
Full textBidandi, Fred. "The effects of poor implementation of housing policy in the Western Cape: a study case of Khayelitsha Site C." Thesis, University of the Western Cape, 2007. http://etd.uwc.ac.za/index.php?module=etd&action=viewtitle&id=gen8Srv25Nme4_7886_1256564275.
Full textThe ANC government came to power in 1994 and has had to come to grips with many economic, social and political challenges it inherited from the apartheid regime. A majority of the people were marginalized and subjected to poor standards of living in areas that were inadequately provided for in terms of basic services. One of the biggest challenges the new government is facing is the delivery of services especially housing. Poor policy implementation continues to complicate the existing problems. The study critically examined the extent to which poor policy implementation has affected the provision of housing in Khayelitsha with focus on the respective stakeholders.
Iannini, Craig, and Craig Iannini. "Contracted chattel : indentured and apprenticed labor in Cape Town, c.1808-1840." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/23252.
Full textBoulter, Roger Stephen. "F C Erasmus and the politics of South African defence, 1948-1959." Thesis, Rhodes University, 1998. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002386.
Full textHodes, Rebecca. "Siyayinqoba/Beat it! : HIV/AIDS on South African television c. 1999-2006." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2009. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.670010.
Full textSithole, Kateko Lucy. "The use and analysis of African languages in the former Model C schools : A case study." Thesis, University of Limpopo (Turfloop Campus), 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10386/1119.
Full textThe study discovered that above mentioned situation has hardly changed English in the in the school under review is fill medium of instruction of the majority of learners,power of Afrikaans. A major recommendation of the study is that African languages should be introduced as medium of infraction for African language speakers in all former model school
Selowa, SC, LJ Shai, P. Masoko, MP Mokgotho, and SR Magano. "Antibacterial activity of extracts of three croton species collected in Mpumalanga region in South Africa." African Journal of traditional complementary and Alternative Medicines, 2010. http://encore.tut.ac.za/iii/cpro/DigitalItemViewPage.external?sp=1001203.
Full textAkoh, Harry Asana. "The separation of powers in Africa : a comparative analysis of Cameroon and South Africa, (c.1961-c.1996), with special reference to nation-building." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/7787.
Full textToo often writers have focused on the economic and political factors in attempting an answer to the question why so many conflicts in Africa? This study breaks new grounds and seeks to demonstrate the role of law in these conflicts. The focus here is on the constitutional law paradigm of the separation of powers. The research is an investigation of the primordial role of the law in causing conflicts in Africa it seeks to demonstrate that the crises that dominated them from 1961-1996 was as a result of constitutional manoeuvres. The hypothesis investigates the separation of powers between the judiciary, legislature and executive in Cameroon and South Africa, which are from enhancing nation building has often been a source of conflict. The manipulation of the constitutions in Cameroon by the francophone majority and in South Africa by the white minority undermined nation building and laid the seed beds for conflicts in the period under survey.
McIntosh, Robert. "State policies in rural South Africa c. 1948 to c. 1960 : Bantu authorities, policy formation and local responses." Thesis, SOAS, University of London, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.313791.
Full textKruger, Nina. "A socio-environmental history of water in the Karoo c.1762-2012, with specific focus on Prince Albert and Williston." Thesis, Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/80315.
Full textENGLISH ABSTRACT: This study examines the history of water in two small Karoo towns. The main argument of the thesis is that the availability of and access to water has played influential roles in the development of Williston and Prince Albert. The ambitions of this thesis are three-fold: firstly, the approach is socio-environmental history and therefore it provides insight into the environmental as well as the social history of the resource in each region. It consciously reflects on the notion of power and explores the manner in which access to water was racialised by authorities in each town. Secondly, this thesis provides insight into the technological and legislative water supply and development of sanitation at both settlements, which is outlined in a broader national development to contextualise the local trajectories. Thirdly, through personal narratives it offers an ethnographic analysis of mind-sets such as fatalism and hopefulness in the face of extreme climatic conditions are examined. The experiences of the socially marginalised and underrepresented are intended to challenge the whiggish celebration of anthropogenic ascendancy over nature in the historiography.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie studie ondersoek die geskiedenis van water in twee klein Karoo dorpies. The hoof argument van die tesis is dat die beskikbaarheid van en toegang tot water bepalende rolle gespeel het in die ontwikkeling van Williston en Prins Albeit. Die doelstellings van hierdie tesis is drievoudig: eerstens, is die benadering sosio-omgewingsgeskiedenis en verskaf dit dus insig oor die omgewings- sowel as die sosiale geskiedenis van hierdie natuurlike hulpbron in elke streek. Hierdie werk weerspieel doelbewus die idee van mag en ondersoek die wyse waarop toegang tot water deur die dorpsowerhede rasbevooroordeeld was. Tweedens, verskaf hierdie tesis insig oor die water toevoer en die ontwikkeling van sanitere geriewe in beide nedersettings, waama die plaaslike ontwikkeling gesien word binne ' n breer nasionale konteks. Derdens word daar deur middel van persoonlike vertellings gekyk na die opkoms van etnografiese ingesteldhede soos fatalisme en hoop wanneer uiterste klimaatstoestande in die gesig gestaar word. Die ervannge van die sosiaal gemarginaliseerde en die onderverteenwoordigde groepe word uitgelig ten einde die liberate viering van antropogeniese dorninasie oor die natuur uit te daag.
Jacobs, Carli. "Identifying export opportunities for South Africa in South America with special reference to measuring trade barriers / Jacobs C." Thesis, North-West University, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10394/8200.
Full textThesis (MCom (International Trade))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2012.
Westaway, Ashley Frank Hurford. "The formulation of modern power configurations in the Keiskammahoek district of the Ciskei from c.1948 to the present." Thesis, Rhodes University, 1993. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002426.
Full textDooling, Wayne. "Law and community in a slave society : Stellenbosch district, c.1760-1820." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1991. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/21835.
Full textThis dissertation is primarily concerned with the functioning of the law in the Cape Colony in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries as it pertained to slaves and masters (and to a lesser extent Khoi servants). It examines the operation of the law in one particular rural district, namely, Stellenbosch in the years c.1760-1820. The chief primary sources include criminal -- and on a smaller scale civil -- records of the local and central courts of the colony. Travellers' accounts have also been utilised. The study of one particular rural district reveals the extent to which the law was intricately woven into the fabric of the settler 'community'. Despite differentials of wealth, the settlers in Stellenbosch district were essentially part of a community of slaveholders. The contours of the settler community fundamentally influenced every step of the legal process. Members of the settler community were in a situation of face-to-face interaction. This meant that often, in conflicts between settlers, recourse to the law was seen as a last resort and mo.re emphasis was placed on the maintenance of personal social relationships. However, this community, of which a landed elite stood in the forefront, had discordant features and domination of the poor by the rich did not go without any struggle. The features of the settler community also fundamentally influenced the position of slaves in the law. Access to the courts for the slaves for complaints against their masters was very significantly determined by conflicts which existed amongst slaveholders. In court the extent of solidarity amongst members of the community could ultimately determine the chances of success for slaves. Another way in which concerns of community influenced the legal process was by the importance which was attached to the reputations of individual slaveowners. Often such concerns overrode strictly legal ones. Even in determining the severity of sentences in criminal cases reputations of individuals were of primary importance. The VOC not only served to bolster the authority of slaveowners but also to keep the wider society in control. Therefore, it could not allow slaveholder tyranny over their labourers to go unchecked. Moreover, the legal system had to be more than simply an instrument in the hands of the master class. At the local level, the VOC could be seen to be acting in the interests of the wider society by listening to the complaints of slaves and prosecuting individual masters. Roman common law, as opposed to statutory law, was the law most commonly used in criminal cases involving slaves. This had two important implications. Firstly, Roman law did not deny the slave any personality and prosecutors constantly reminded slaveowners that slaves were persons. Secondly, Roman law had an apparent universality in that its dictates were made applicable to all in society. These factors combined to make the law perform a hegemonic function.
Gess, David Wolfgang. "Hunting and power : class, race and privilege in the Eastern Cape and the Transvaal Lowveld, c. 1880-1905." Thesis, Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/86262.
Full textENGLISH ABSTRACT: This dissertation examines the identity of hunters, sportsmen and their associated communities in two diverse regions of southern Africa during the last two decades of the nineteenth and the first decade of the twentieth centuries. It argues that this was a critical period during which new patterns of hunting and local tradition were created. In the eastern Cape districts of Albany, Fort Beaufort and Bathurst kudu and buffalo were hunted pursuant to permits granted in terms of the Game Act, 1886. An analysis of the identity of those to whom these permits were granted or refused provides insights into power, connection and influence amongst the English-speaking colonial elite of the region who sought to control the right to hunt “royal game”. It also reveals their interaction with civil servants who exercised the power to grant or withhold the privilege. Kudu were transferred from public to private ownership, through a process of “privatization” and “commodification” on enclosed private land, and there preserved for sporting purposes by the local rural gentry. The survival – and even growth – in numbers of kudu in the region was achieved in these private spaces. Buffalo, on the other hand, were hunted into local extinction notwithstanding their protection as “royal game”. In the north-eastern Transvaal Lowveld wild animals in public ownership were hunted by a wide variety of hunters with competing interests. The identity of the “lost” Lowveld hunters, previously hidden from history, including an important but overlooked component of elite recreational hunters from the eastern Cape, is explored as a window into the history of hunting in the region prior to the establishment of game reserves. Both the identity and networks of these hunters and sportsmen are considered in the context of enduring concerns about race, class, gender and the exercise of power.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie tesis ondersoek die identiteit van die jagters, sportmanne en die gepaardgaande gemeenskappe in twee verskillende streke van Suider-Afrika gedurende die laaste twee dekades van die negentiende en die eerste dekade van die twintigste eeu. Dit voer aan dat hierdie 'n kritieke tydperk was waartydens nuwe patrone van jag en plaaslike tradisie geskep is. In die Oos-Kaapse distrikte van Albany, Fort Beaufort en Bathurst is die jag op koedoes en buffels toegelaat op grond van permitte toegestaan in terme van die Wild Wet, 1886. Die ontleding van die identiteit van diegene aan wie hierdie permitte toegestaan of geweier was, bied insae oor die uitoefening van mag, verhoudings en invloed onder die Engelssprekende koloniale elite van die streek, wat probeer het om beheer uit te oefen oor die jag van die “koninklike wild”. Dit openbaar ook hul interaksie met staatsamptenare wat hulle magte gebruik het om permitte uit te ruik of te weerhou. Eienaarskap van koedoes was oorgedra vanaf openbare na privaat besit, deur 'n proses van "privatisering " en "kommodifikasie" op geslote private grond, met die verstandhouding dat dit vir sport – doeleindes deur die plaaslike landelike burger gebruik kon word. Die oorlewing – en selfs groei – in die getal koedoes in die streek is behaal in die private besit. Buffels, aan die ander kant, is tot plaaslike uitwissing gejag ondanks hul beskerming as "koninklike wild". In die Noord-Oos Transvaalse Laeveld is wilde diere in openbare besit gejag deur 'n wye verskeidenheid van jagters met mededingende belange. Die identiteit van die "verlore" Laeveld jagters, voorheen verborge in die geskiedenis, wat 'n belangrike maar oor die hoof verwaarloosde komponent van elite rekreasionele jagters van die Oos-Kaap insluit, word ondersoek as 'n venster op die geskiedenis van jag in die streek voor die totstandkoming van wildreservate. Beide die identiteit en netwerke van hierdie jagters en sportmanne word beskou in die konteks van blywende belangstelling met ras, klas, geslag en die uitoefening van mag.
Olivier, Charleine. "School libraries in former model c high schools – the case of the Framesby high school media centre." Thesis, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10948/19795.
Full textVan, der Heyden Francois. "An investigation of photosynthetic C-fixation in fynbos growth forms and its variation with season and environmental conditions." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17725.
Full textThe seasonal and diurnal patterns of photosynthetic gas exchange and the water relations of seven species of the mediterranean-climate region of South Africa (fynbos) were investigated. The following species, representing the major fynbos elements, were chosen for intensive investigation: Erica plukenetii and Erica hispidula (ericoid element), Thamnochortus lucens and Askidiosperma paniculatum (restioid element), Protea laurifolia and Leucadendron salignum (proteoid element). Metrosideros angustifolia, a shrub of riparian habitats, was also studied.
Nogemane, Vumile. "A study of the first group of Friars Minor (Franciscans) in South Africa, c. 1932-1960." Thesis, Rhodes University, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1001859.
Full textMazinyo, Sonwabo Perez. "Community participation in solid waste management in high-density low-income areas: the case of C-Section in Duncan Village." Thesis, University of Fort Hare, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10353/261.
Full textLiphapang, Maphoka Christina. "Inclusive education in the South African context : analysing how cultural diversity is accommodated in five former model c schools in Bloemfontein." Thesis, Bloemfontein : Central University of Technology, Free State, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/11462/90.
Full textThis study investigates whether five former Model C schools in Bloemfontein are inclusive of diverse cultures found among their learner population. In apartheid South Africa segregation on the basis of racial and cultural difference was policy. Therefore, post apartheid legislation and policies, coupled with the fact that inclusion is not always understood or welcomed where people are used to segregated systems necessitated this investigation. The study was qualitative in nature and Buskens-Meulenberg’s Free Attitude Interview (FAI) was used as a main source of data collection. Principals of the five former Model C schools that formed part of this study and three university students who are former Model C schools learners were interviewed using open ended questions. It was important to employ the Free Attitude Interview because it meant the interviewees were free to talk about anything they felt like, as long as it was within the framework of the starting question. Secondly, it allowed for reflection on the dominant discourse and also gave a voice to the dominated discourse. To arrive at the findings data was analyzed and interpreted using Fairclough’s Textual Oriented Discourse Analysis (TODA). This method of analysis allowed the researcher to look not only at the text of the interviews but also at their discursive practices. The following findings emerged from the data analysis. The general finding from the data collected from both the principals and students was that these schools expected learners from diverse cultural backgrounds to adapt to the existing ‘school culture’ which is white middle class. The curriculum delivery, staff provisioning, and everything within the schools was found to reflect ‘white middle class culture’. The interviews from both the principals and students indicated that instead of being inclusive of all learners these schools go out of their way to assimilate children from other cultures especially black children. While this is the case it is also clear that the two groups of respondents view this differently. To the white school principals this is an accepted and normal way consciously encouraged and promoted. On the other hand this is a sore point to the black students which led them to feel that they did not belong in these schools and left them with feelings of alienation. I therefore argue that in spite of the rhetoric endorsing equity, redress, justice and respect for difference including cultural diversity, little has changed in terms of educational outcomes. Young black children who go to these former Model C schools still face exclusionary practices despite the fact that these schools have been open to all racial groups and they are physically there. While I have taken care not to generalize from the findings, – since this was never the intention of the study - I nevertheless drew the conclusion that these schools are actually not inclusive of learners from diverse cultural backgrounds. Adhering to the ‘ethos’ of the school and thereby maintaining the status quo seems to be the main objective of the schools (principals). In-fact black learners in these schools continue to experience exclusion and explicit racism. The study concludes that power structures in these schools – management and governance -, curriculum and the way it is delivered and all other activities within the school are used to reinforce domination of the learners from cultural backgrounds other than that of the school. From the findings the study recommend that for these schools to be truly inclusive of learners from diverse cultural backgrounds the Department of Education should take a leading role in ensuring that transformation takes place in these schools and they become inclusive of all learners. For this nation to be a true rainbow nation the Department of Education should not leave the transformation of these schools to the School Management Teams and Governing Bodies. Recommendations on what schools themselves can do to ensure that they accommodate, acknowledge and reflect cultural diversity and as such are inclusive of all learners are also given. Furthermore suggestions for relevant future research, based on the findings are made.
Wotshela, L. E. "Transformation in late colonial Ngqika society : a political, economic and social history of African communities in the district of Stutterheim (Eastern Cape), c.1870-1910." Thesis, Rhodes University, 1994. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002427.
Full textMthatyana, Andisiwe Tutula Zinzi. "How are the messages of the official grade ten sexuality education curriculum at a former model C girls' high school in South Africa mediated by student sexual cultures?" Thesis, Rhodes University, 2014. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1013262.
Full textOppelt, Riaan N. "C. Louis Leipoldt and the making of a South African modernism." Thesis, Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/80232.
Full textENGLISH ABSTRACT: C. Louis Leipoldt had, in his lifetime and after his death, a celebrated reputation as an important Afrikaans poet in South Africa. He remains most remembered for his contribution to the growth of Afrikaans literature and for the significance of his poetry in helping to establish Afrikaans literature in the early part of the twentieth century in South Africa. He is also mostly remembered for his recipe books and food and wine guides, as well as his career as a paediatrician. Between 1980 and 2001, scholarly work was done to offer a reappraisal of Leipoldt’s literary works. During this period, previously unpublished material written by Leipoldt was made publicly available. Three novels by Leipoldt, written in English, were published at irregular intervals between 1980 and 2001. The novels cast Leipoldt in a different light, suggesting that as an English-language writer he was against many of the ideas he was associated with when viewed as an Afrikaans-language writer. These ideas, for the most part, linked Leipoldt to the Afrikaner nationalist project of the twentieth century and co-opted him to Afrikaner nationalist policies of racial segregation based on the campaigning for group identity. The three English-language novels, collectively making up the Valley trilogy, not only reveal Leipoldt’s opposition to the nationalist project but also draw attention to some of his other work in Afrikaans, in which this same ideological opposition may be noted. In this thesis I argue that Leipoldt’s Valley trilogy, as well as some of his other, Afrikaans works, not only refute the nationalist project but offer a reading of South African modernity in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This reading of historical events in South Africa that reveals the trajectory of the country’s modernity is strongly indicative of a unique literary modernism. It is my argument that Leipoldt’s Valley trilogy shows a modernist critique of the historical events it presents. Because the concept of a South African modernism in literature has not yet been fully defined, it is also an aim of this thesis to propose that Leipoldt’s works contribute a broad but sustained literary outlook that covers his own lifespan (1880-1947) as well as the historical period he examines in the Valley trilogy (the late 1830s -the late 1920s/early 1930s). This literary outlook, I argue, is a modernist outlook, but also a transplantation of a Western understanding of what modernism is to the South African context in which there are crucial differences. This thesis hopes to arrive at an outcome that binds Leipoldt’s anti-nationalism to his literary critique of the modernity he explores in the Valley trilogy, thereby proving that Leipoldt could be read as a South African literary modernist.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: C. Louis Leipoldt het in sy leeftyd en na sy dood 'n gevierde reputasie behou as 'n belangrike Afrikaanse digter in Suid-Afrika. Hy word die meeste onthou vir sy bydrae tot die groei van die Afrikaanse letterkunde en die belangrikeheid van sy poësie tot die Afrikaanse letterkunde, se stigting in die vroë deel van die twintigste eeu in Suid-Afrika. Hy word meestal ook onthou vir sy resepteboeke en kos en wyn gidse, sowel as vir sy loopbaan as 'n pediater. Tussen 1980 en 2001, is navorsingswerk gedoen om ‘n herwaardering van Leipoldt se literêre werk aan te bied. Gedurende hierdie tydperk was voorheen ongepubliseerde material geskryf deur Leipoldt publiek sigbaar gestel. Drie romans deur Leipoldt, wat in Engels geskryf is, is gepubliseer op ongereelde tussenposes tussen 1980 en 2001. Die romans stel Leipoldt in ‘n ander lig, wat daarop dui dat as 'n Engelse skrywer was hy gekant teen baie van die idees waarmee hy geassosieer was toe hy as 'n Afrikaanstalige skrywer beskou was. Hierdie idees het grootendeels vir Leipoldt gekoppel aan die Afrikaner-nasionalistiese projek van die twintigste eeu en het hom gekoöpteer tot Afrikaner nasionalistiese beleide van rasse-segregasie gegrond op die veldtog vir groepidentiteit. Die drie Engelstalige romans, gesamentlik die Valley-trilogie, openbaar nie net Leipoldt se teenkanting van die nasionalistiese projek nie, maar vestig ook aandag op sommige van sy ander werk in Afrikaans waarin hierdie selfde ideologiese opposisie aangeteken kan word. In hierdie tesis voer ek aan dat Leipoldt se Valley-trilogie, sowel as sommige van sy ander, Afrikaans werke, nie net die nasionalistiese projek weerlê nie, maar ook ‘n lesing aanbied van Suid-Afrikaanse moderniteit in die negentiende en twintigste eeus. Hierdie lesing van historiese gebeure in Suid-Afrika wat die trajek van die land se moderniteit openbaar is sterk aanduidend van 'n unieke literêre modernisme. Dit is my redenering dat Leipoldt se Valley-trilogie 'n modernistiese kritiek toon van die historiese gebeurtenisse wat dit aanbied. Omdat die konsep van 'n Suid-Afrikaanse modernisme in die letterkunde nog nie ten volle gedefineer is nie, is dit ook 'n doel van hierdie tesis om voor te stel dat Leipoldt se werke 'n breë maar volgehoue literêre kritiek bydra wat sy eie leeftyd dek (1880-1947) asook die historiese tydperk wat hy ondersoek in die Valley-trilogie (die laat 1830s tot die laat 1920s/vroë 1930s). Hierdie literêre vooruitsig, redeneer ek, is 'n modernistiese vooruitsig, maar ook 'n oorplanting van 'n Westerse begrip van wat die modernisme is tot die Suid-Afrikaanse konteks waarin daar belangrike verskille is. Hierdie tesis hoop tot 'n uitkoms wat Leipoldt se anti-nasionalisme bind tot aan sy literêre kritiek van die moderniteit wat hy ondersoek in die Valley-trilogie, en daardeur bewys dat Leipoldt gelees kan word word as 'n Suid-Afrikaanse literêre modernis
Bramwell, William J. "Loyalties and the politics of incorporation in South Africa : the case of Pondoland, c.1870-1913." Thesis, University of Warwick, 2015. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/79567/.
Full textCartwright, Katherine. "'Perceptions of the 'red peril'' : the National Party's changing portrayal of the 'communist threat' c.1985 - February 1990." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/17487.
Full textFor the National Party of South Africa, Communism was simultaneously a legitimate concern and a useful concept with which to attract voters and deflect criticism. The threat of Communism was frequently allied with the threat of African nationalism in National Party discourse during the apartheid era. The alliance between the African National Congress and the South African Communist Party, and the Soviet's role in supporting various governments and opposition movements on the subcontinent lent credence to the National Party's stance. This study, believed to be the first of its kind on the subject, examined the National Party's perception of the Communist 'threat' or 'red peril' from c. 1985 until February 1990, at a time when the Communist's role on the subcontinent was changing but 'revolutionary' unrest in South Africa was escalating. The study culminated in an assessment of National Party discourse prior to and during February 1990 to decipher the influence of the collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe on the decision to lift the bans on the ANC, SACP and PAC. Secondary research examined the facets of the Communist 'threat' in South Africa. Primary research used the South African Survey, the parliamentary Hansard, key journals, party and sub-national newspapers, the papers of P. W. Botha and F.W. de Klerk, and party electioneering material to analyse National Party references to the Communist 'threat'. In addition F.W. de Klerk, and his co-author, David Steward were interviewed. The analysis was necessarily qualitative, but the volume of evidence gathered enabled a number of insights to be advanced. The National Party's references to the Communist 'threat' changed during the period in response to political settlement in South West Africa/Namibia, the increased pressure from the West to abolish apartheid, and to domestic political challenges both from traditional sources of opposition and traditional sources of support. The confusion caused by the changing loci of domestic political opposition and international criticism was also evident. While the portrayal of a Soviet driven Communist threat declined in party discourse and the National Party posited a more constructive approach to socio-economic aspects of the Communist threat (in the face of Conservative Party opposition), the portrayal of a military and political threat from Communist-backed forces remained common until 1989. The discourse between 1985-89 did not anticipate the lifting of the ban on the ANC-SACP alliance who were portrayed in party rhetoric as being committed to Communism, and therefore illegitimate negotiating partners, as late as July 1989. In this context the study examined the February 1990 lifting of the ban on the ANC-SACP alliance, against the background of the collapse of Communism in Eastern Europe. The study demonstrated de Klerk's misjudgement of the ANC and his belief that as a result of the collapse of Communism, the initiative could be seized at the ANC's expense, to create a new political dispensation that still 'protected' the white minority.
Chuba, David. "A comparative study of the distribution of C₃ and C₄ species of Cyperaceae in South Africa in relation to climate." Bachelor's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25990.
Full textKirkaldy, Alan. ""The sea is in our blood" : community and craft in Kalk Bay, c. 1880-1939." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22499.
Full textThis thesis examines the historic right of the Kalk Bay fishermen to occupy the area and exploit the marine resources of False Bay. It attempts to provide the historical base absent from anthropological, and other, works which have focussed on the area. In recent years, the local handline fishing community has faced destruction by a complex web of political, social and economic forces. This work shows that these have simply been new challenges in a long line, albeit the most serious, faced by the fisherfolk of Kalk Bay. The study begins with an examination of human settlement, and the origins of fishing, in Kalk Bay to the late nineteenth century. This is followed by an analysis of the organisation of the local fishing industry at the close of that century. These two chapters provide the backdrop for discussion of the commercialization of the local fishing effort, between 1890 and 1913. The fourth chapter deals with the establishment of the modern fishing industry in Kalk Bay, from 1913 to 1939. The thesis concludes with a brief examination of the community to the 1980s. Major findings are that the local fishermen of today are the product of a cultural and economic tradition stretching back thousands of years. By the late nineteenth century, the rhythm of life in the area was being rapidly changed by its incorporation into the social and economic orbit of greater Cape Town. Over the main period covered by the thesis, the local fishermen, as a result of their race and class, occupied the weaker position in conflicts with local authorities, the state and capital. However, they were able to fight dependence upon a single buyer and growing pressures for their proletarianisation and managed to maintain their independence as petty-commodity producers. The independence of the fisherfolk was nevertheless maintained at the expense of increasingly depressed local markets for their fish. Since the Second World War, the escalating political, social and economic subordination of the fisherfolk has progressively threatened the existence of the handline fishing industry and the fishing community at Kalk Bay. However, should racial ideologies and commitment to monopoly capitalization of the industry be set aside by the state, the Kalk Bay fisherfolk could survive, albeit in altered and diminished circumstances.
Zembe, Lycias. "Investigating cross-clade immune responses in HIV-1 subtype C-infected individuals from South Africa." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/12731.
Full textThe increasing diversity of HIV-1 in different geographic regions presents a challenge for the development of an HIV/AIDS vaccine. Even if proven effective, the ability of a vaccine to have cross-subtype and intra-subtype protection remains an important question. The aim of the study was to investigate cross- and intra-clade T cell immune responses in HIV-1 subtype C-infected individuals. The objectives were to genetically characterise full length gag gene sequences from individuals chronically infected with HIV-1 and then assess the degree of cross-reactive immune responses in an ELlS pot assay using peptide reagents based on vaccine candidates.
Getz, Trevor Russel. "Smuts and the politics of colonial expansion : South African strategy in regard to South-West Africa [Namibia] and the League of Nations Mandate, c.1914-1924." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 1997. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9507.
Full text'Smuts and ,the Politics of Colonial Expansion: South African Strategy in Regard to South-West Africa [Namibia] and the League of Nations Mandate: c.1914-1924' is an analysis of Jan Smuts's central role in the Union's conquest of South West Africa in 1915, the fight for annexation of the territory in 1918-1919, and his subsequent shaping of the Mandate as Prime Minister of the Union until 1924. In addition it is an investigation of Smuts's motivations during this period. Three significant conclusions emerge from this dissertation. Primarily, I argue that Smuts was involved in all three above described stages of the Union's acquisition of South-West Africa, as both a policy-maker and the lead representative of South Africa's interests. Most importantly, I evaluate Smuts's incentives for so passionately leading the attempt to incorporate South-West Africa and contend that Smuts wanted to annex the territory because of his desire to create a white-led superstate in southern Africa, independent of European influence and with regional hegemony, and that the annexation of South-West Africa was an important step in that direction for Smuts. Additonally, I assess Smuts's successes and failures and conclude that his failure to fully realize annexation of the territory was responsible for Namibia's eventual independence. In order to prove my assertions, I rely on both secondary and primary information from South African and Namibian archives. My primary sources are drawn from the papers of the Governor-General of the Union, the Prime Minister of the Union, the Secretary and Administrator of South-West Africa, and others such as the American Ambassador to South Africa.
Rueedi, Franziska Leonie. "Political mobilisation, violence and control in the townships of the Vaal Triangle, South Africa, c.1976-1986." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2013. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:0054b5ef-824a-4c10-8f76-f5b25ed2058e.
Full textDebeila, Thipe Jan. "Characterisation of selected Culicoides (Diptera : Ceratopogonidae) populations in South Africa using genetic markers." Diss., University of Pretoria, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/2263/25696.
Full textVeterinary Tropical Diseases
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Smulders, Heidi. "An exploration of the interaction between integration and discipline in a former model C school in East London." Thesis, Rhodes University, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002570.
Full textWilkinson, Eduan. "Molecular characterization of non-subtype C and recombinant HIV-1 viruses from Cape Town, South Africa." Thesis, Stellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/4830.
Full textSubmitted in fulfilment for the degree MSc in BioMedical Science at Stellenbosch University.
ENGLISH ABSTRACT: HIV-1 was first diagnosed within South Africa in 1982. In the 1980’s homosexual transmission dominated the HIV-1 epidemic within the country. In the late 1980’s the second HIV-1 epidemic was recognized amongst heterosexual individuals. Today heterosexual transmission of HIV-1 dominates the epidemic in South Africa. Subtype C HIV-1 is responsible for the overwhelming majority of heterosexual infections. An estimated 95% of all infections in the country are thought to be subtype C related. To date only a few papers have been published on non-subtype C HIV within the country. This study characterized subgenomic and near full-length sequences of non-subtype C HIV-1 viruses from the Cape Town area. The gag p24, pol-integrase, and env gp41 regions of 11 of the 12 samples were characterized by amplification and direct sequencing. Phylogenetic analysis of the sequenced data, with online subtyping tools (REGA and jpHMM) and the drawing of NJ-trees revealed the presence of subtype A1, B, F1 and recombinant viral forms such as AD, AG and AC. One of the isolates was classified as a subtype C and was included for control purposes. Near full-length characterization of four of the samples were attempted, through full genome PCR amplification and sequencing. Analysis of sequenced data with the use of subtyping-, recombination identification, and tree drawing tools revealed a subtype B, and A1 isolate. The other two isolates were identified as possible AC and AD recombinants. The data that was generated will greatly improve our knowledge of non-subtype C isolates circulating within South Africa. Due to the possible impact that the high degree of genetic variation that HIV may have on vaccine design and development and ARV treatment and HIV diagnosis, ongoing research of the epidemiology and spread of HIV within South Africa are needed.
AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: MIV was in 1982 vir die eerste keer in Suid Afrika gediagnoseer en was hoofsaaklik deur homoseksuele kontak oorgedra. Aan die begin van die 1990’s is `n tweede MIV epidemie gewaar onder heteroseksuele individue. Heteroseksuele oordrag van die virus domineer tans die MIV epidemie in Suid Afrika en is meestal subtipe C verwant. Subtipe C, MIV-1 is verantwoordelik vir 95 persent van alle infeksies in die land. Tot hede is slegs `n paar publikasies oor die nie-subtipe C epidemie in die land gepubliseer. Die huidige studie was gemik op die karakterisering van subgenomiese en vollengte genome van nie-subtipe C MIV isolate van die Kaapstad omgewing. Die gag p24, pol-integrase en env gp41 subgenomiese fragmente van 12 monsters was gekarakteriseer deur amplifikasie en DNS nukleotied volgorde bepaling. Filogenetiese analise deur middel van subtipering (REGA en jpHMM aanlyn subtiperings programme) asook NJ-filogenetiese bome van die data het die teenwoordigheid van subtipe A1, B, en F1, asook verskeie rekombinante viruse insluitende AG, AD en AC vorme aangedui. Een van die isolate was geklassifiseer as `n subtipe C maar is in die studie ingevoeg vir kontrole doeleindes. Vollengte karakterisering van 4 uit die 12 isolate was ook gedoen deur vollengte genoom amplifikasie en DNS nukleotied volgorde bepaling. Tydens die analisering van die DNS volgorde data, deur middel van aanlyn subtipering, rekombinasie identifikasie (Simplot en RIP), en filogenetiese boom konstruksie programme is twee isolate geidentifiseer as subtipe B en A1 MIV-1 viruse. Die ander twee isolate was as moontlike AC en AD rekombinante geklassifiseer. Die data van nie-subtipe C MIV isolate sal ons kennis van die nie-subtipe C epidemie in Suid Afrika versterk. As gevolg van die impak wat die hoë graad van genetisie variasie van MIV op die ontwikkeling van entstowwe, sowel as die diagnose en behandeling van pasiente kan hê, is verdere navorsing in die epidemiologie van die MI-virus in Suid Afrika nodig.
James, Ncumisa Portia. "The relationship between an automatically unfair dismissal in terms of section 187(1)(c) of the labour relations act and a dismissal for operational reasons." Thesis, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10948/1034.
Full textPotter, Simon James. "Nationalism, imperialism and the press in Britain and the Dominions c.1898-1914." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.365621.
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