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Journal articles on the topic 'Zimbabwean Personal narratives'

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1

Bachisi, Ivan. "Becoming Mobile Readers-Narratives of Zimbabwean Teenagers’ Mobile Reading Experiences." Journal of Languages and Language Teaching 11, no. 4 (2023): 593. http://dx.doi.org/10.33394/jollt.v11i4.6699.

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This article critically reviews the mobile reading experiences of a group of twenty-three Zimbabwean urban adolescent learners. This paper contends that while mobile reading is a growing mode of literacy development across the world, little is known about the different strategies Zimbabwean adolescent learners have had to employ as they reconfigure and rethink their literacy practices around new reading media like cell phones and tablets. This paper adopts a constructivist approach to trace, document, and analyse the personal narratives of the participants’ mobile reading experiences during th
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Gatsi, Roswitta, Margaret Funke Omidire, and Salome Human-Vogel. "Conceptualization of the Premature School Exit Phenomenon in Mashonaland Region of Zimbabwe: The Voice of Early School Leavers." Journal of Black Psychology 46, no. 2-3 (2020): 228–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0095798420908458.

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School dropout is a major cause of attrition in schools globally, and its implications could be far-reaching. Evidence from previous studies has shown that the voice of those who have lived experiences of the phenomenon is missing. The present study investigated early school leavers’ conceptualization of school dropout from a Zimbabwean perspective. Twenty-two early school leavers from three sites in Zimbabwe participated in the study. The data collection strategies included focus group discussions, interviews, and life-story narratives. The findings indicated the need for an expanded definiti
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Karekwaivanane, George H. "‘THROUGH THE NARROW DOOR’: NARRATIVES OF THE FIRST GENERATION OF AFRICAN LAWYERS IN ZIMBABWE." Africa 86, no. 1 (2016): 59–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0001972015000789.

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ABSTRACTGiven the important role played by lawyers in formal legal systems, the study of legal professionals can help us understand the efforts to maintain law and social order in Africa. This article examines the narratives of two Zimbabwean lawyers, Kennedy Sibanda and Honour Mkushi, about their experiences as legal professionals between 1970 and 1990, and makes three main arguments. Firstly, these narratives reveal the complex interplay between individual agency, politics and law across the two decades. Secondly, lawyers' participation in the social and political struggles of the period wer
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Matsika, Tsiidzai. "The Mother Complex in Dambudzo Marechera’s Life and Works." Matatu 55, no. 1 (2024): 119–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18757421-05501010.

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Abstract Dambudzo Marechera, an iconic figure in Zimbabwean literature, is often celebrated for his avant-garde and confrontational literary style. His works, which reflect a tumultuous life marked by personal and political strife, also reveal a complex relationship with women. His upbringing in the slums of Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) exposed him to poverty, violence, and racial tensions. Marechera’s mother, Masvotwa Venezia Marechera, was a maid, and he often depicted her in the context of Rhodesian violence and prostitution. His strained relationship with his family, especially his mother, is a
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Stevens, Amy, Pete Fussey, Daragh Murray, Kuda Hove, and Otto Sake. "‘I started seeing shadows everywhere’: The diverse chilling effects of surveillance in Zimbabwe." Big Data & Society 10, no. 1 (2023): 205395172311586. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/20539517231158631.

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Recent years have witnessed growing ubiquity and potency of state surveillance measures with heightened implications for human rights and social justice. While impacts of surveillance are routinely framed through ‘privacy’ narratives, emphasising ‘chilling effects’ surfaces a more complex range of harms and rights implications for those who are, or believe they are, subjected to surveillance. Although first emphasised during the McCarthy era, surveillance ‘chilling effects’ remain under-researched, particularly in Africa. Drawing on rare interview data from participants subjected to state-spon
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Chikafa-Chipiro, Rosemary. "Meeting Dambudzo at Oxford." Matatu 55, no. 1 (2024): 104–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18757421-05501009.

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Abstract This paper is a narrative of my personal (physical and spiritual) encounter with Dambudzo Marechera during my research visit at Oxford. Marechera was a prolific Zimbabwean writer, poet and playwright whose memory is entrenched in the Zimbabwean imagination because of his artistic prowess and personal-political exploits. He was expelled from the University of Oxford in 1976 and died in Zimbabwe on 18 August 1987. My encounter with Dambudzo is punctuated by my quest to understand what it was like for him as a black Zimbabwean in exile studying at the prestigious institution and having t
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Nyanda, Josiah. "The Curse of Historical Recurrence in Geoffrey Nyarota's Against the Grain : Memoirs of a Zimbabwean Newsman." Research in African Literatures 54, no. 2 (2024): 128–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.2979/ral.00008.

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ABSTRACT: Geoffrey Nyarota, a Zimbabwean journalist of note, is renowned for his investigative journalistic skills and numerous conflicts with political authorities. He is probably the most hired and fired newspaper editor in post independence Zimbabwe. In this paper, I put forward the argument that in his memoir, Nyarota uses historical recurrence as a motif and narrative strategy to recreate a personal life story that is fraught with events that keep repeating themselves in his life. By tracing his life story from the colonial period to post independence Zimbabwe, and the near tragic events
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Chikwangura-Gwatirisa, Yemurai. "Remembering a Traumatic Past." NAWA Journal of Language and Communication 16, no. 2 (2023): 2–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.59677/njlc.v16i2.36.

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This article analyses the narratives of Gukurahundi , how they are perceived as forms of collective memory culture, how they help to explain personal experiences shared by victims of the 1980s genocide in Zimbabwe, and how these experiences become memory. The Gukurahundi genocide shows that not only do individuals remember, but that remembering can be a collective endeavour. While individual memory is usually bound to the short time span of a human life and disappears with the death of a particular individual, intergenerational and collective cultural memory, on the other hand, is of longer te
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Maxwell, David. "The Durawall of Faith: Pentecostal Spirituality in Neo-Liberal Zimbabwe." Journal of Religion in Africa 35, no. 1 (2005): 4–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1570066052995825.

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AbstractThis paper considers the nature of Pentecostal spirituality in contemporary Zimbabwe, taking as its case study Zimbabwe Assemblies of God, Africa (ZAOGA), one of the continent's largest and most vital Pentecostal movements. The analysis centres upon a lexicon of key words, phrases and narratives used in song, preaching, testimony and prayer. For example, there is a preponderance of images of security, including the 'durawall', the protective concrete fencing surrounding a factory or a suburban home. The paper demonstrates how Pentecostalism, as quintessential popular religion, is able
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Leedy, Todd H. "History with a Mission: Abraham Kawadza and Narratives of Agrarian Change in Zimbabwe." History in Africa 33 (2006): 255–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/hia.2006.0016.

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He was the first man who was clever enough to realize he could sell some green maize at the mine in Penhalonga… Even to build the good houses, you had to come and copy from Kawadza. To buy ploughshares, they had to come and copy from Kawadza… Even those who bought cars, they had to copy from Kawadza… Chief Gandanzara used to walk on foot whenever he wanted to meet anyone. But because of seeing Kawadza riding a horse, he himself decided to ride on a horse… We can say in Mani-caland, or we can say in Zimbabwe, most of the good things were started with Kawadza.Histories of Africa produced during
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C., Tadios, Michelle M., Lissa H., Penelope M., and Bekithemba N. "The Effects of Adult Separation on Children's Academic and Psychosocial Wellbeing at School: A Case Study of Senga Primary School in Gweru, Zimbabwe." African Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities Research 7, no. 1 (2024): 134–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.52589/ajsshr-fywj9tw4.

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This study investigated the lived experiences of children from a primary school in the Gweru region of Zimbabwe, whose parents were either separated or divorced. The study was undertaken to ascertain how these learners are psychologically and academically affected by their family situations. The data were gathered using narrative stories, personal narrative diary entries, and interviews. The study was qualitative in nature and aimed to achieve an in-depth understanding of the topic through studying 12 participants, who were purposely sampled. The data were transcribed and analysed using the op
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Matewe, Bothwell. "‘Midlife Crisis’ and the scramble for fresh personal purposes amongst middle-aged men." Global Journal of Psychology Research: New Trends and Issues 13, no. 2 (2023): 117–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.18844/gjpr.v13i2.8944.

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The universality of the midlife crisis has cost so many middle-aged men, with so many men rebooting and restarting their lives in the scramble for a fresh personal purpose. The researcher’s inquisitiveness about the experiences of middle-aged men in an identified community in Masvingo, Zimbabwe ignited the study. However, little research has been carried out in this nation concerning the subject under study. The study aimed to understand the psychological and social experiences of middle-aged men and how midlife crises can facilitate marital instabilities and a drastic change in social life. A
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Almeida, Luiza Nascimento. "Do “desconforto” ao encontro comigo mesma." Revista Música e Cultura 13, no. 3 (2024): 146–66. https://doi.org/10.71199/bnnv0g87.

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The objective of this article is to provide an analysis of moments in the history of Ethnomusicology, during and following its inception, particularly when applied to Africa and the African diaspora. This analysis draws on authors from Brazil and abroad who have addressed this subject, specifically those who have situated it within the scope of ethno-racial relations – e.g., Kofi Agawu from Ghana, Mhoze Chikowero from Zimbabwe – thereby highlighting power relations with their asymmetries. Such asymmetries have resulted not only a mitigation of the epistemicide imposed by colonial/neocolonial w
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Muyengwa, Shylock, and Brian Child. "Re-assertion of Elite Control in Masoka’s Wildlife Program, Zimbabwe." Journal of Sustainable Development 10, no. 6 (2017): 28. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/jsd.v10n6p28.

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Local level governance is crucial in delivering benefits of conservation to communities. This paper provides a historical review of the evolution of governance and the emergence of elite capture in Masoka’s wildlife program in Zimbabwe between 2009 and 2011. Fifty-four key informant interviews and reviews of numerous secondary data sources analyzed in order to understand accountability mechanisms, collective decision-making, and the allocation of wildlife revenues into various local initiatives. The local narratives and secondary data suggested that the governance had flipped from one of imper
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Sylvia Pasi, Juliet, and Rewai Makamani. "A rhetorical reading of Tendayi Westerhof's Unlucky in Love." Journal of African Languages and Literary Studies 1, no. 3 (2020): 65–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.31920/2633-2116/2020/v1n3a4.

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What could be discursively more engaging in rhetorical investigation than people writing about what they know best, their life histories? Apparently, rhetorical analysis involving the retrospective narrative in prose is herein perceived as one of the most contested issues in written discourses as it revolves around an often highly emotive terrain - "rhetorical situation" (Bitzer, 1968 in Hauser & Kjeldsen n.d., p.100) wherein the rhetorical agency's (author) utterance (literary genesis) is nothing more than a manifestation of a unique sitz-in-leben (situation in life) - the human condition
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Ndoro, Ison, and Fortunate Chokani. "Exploring support systems for the prevention of drugs and substance use relapse at Chikurubi Psychiatric Hospital in Zimbabwe." International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Invention 13, no. 9 (2024): 07–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.35629/7722-13090713.

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This qualitative case study explored patient perceptions on the efficacy of relapse prevention support systems available for individuals institutionalized for Substance Use Disorders(SUD)s at Chikurubi psychiatric hospital in Harare Zimbabwe.Focused Group Discussions and Individual In-depth Narrative Interviews(IIDNI) were used to collect data and analyze emerging themes. Participants underscored the essence of prescribed antipsychotic medication in facilitating recovery and mitigating the risk of relapse. Concerns about the infiltration of triggering substances such as cigarettes into the hos
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Kimberley, Anna B. "UNDERSTANDING LIVED EXPERIENCES THROUGH AN INCLUSIVE LENS OF INTERPRETATIVE PHENOMENOLOGICAL ANALYSIS (IPA) AND INTERPRETATIVE POETICS (IP)." New Trends in Qualitative Research 21, no. 1 (2025): e1029. https://doi.org/10.36367/ntqr.21.1.2025.e1029.

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The paper describes the inclusivity of two methodological approaches, applied in PhD study, completed in 2021. The study combined Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) and elements of Interpretive Poetics (IP). The focus of the study was understanding the live experiences of educated professionals from selected. African countries, living in Finland. The data were collected through semi-structured interviews with ten participants, five females and five males from Kenya, Zimbabwe, Nigeria, Zambia and Ghana. At the time of the study, they were employed by Finnish companies. The data was
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Alsubhi, Maha, Lydia Aston, Julie Ayre, et al. "Oral presentationsSystematic review of the factors associated with health behaviours related to obesity among refugee childrenPreliminary development of quality of life scales for children and adults with Niemann-Pick Type CThe diversity of diabetes-related self-monitoring and problem-solving practices across health literacy levels: An interview studyResilience as a predictor of burnout, depression and hope among medical studentsThe lived experience of parents with children who have had retinoblastomaPerceptions of older adults and GPs towards the management of musculoskeletal pain in primary careA qualitative study of stress and wellbeing in national health service (NHS) employeesThe effectiveness of sedentary behaviour reduction workplace interventions on cardiometabolic risk markers: A systematic reviewIs delivering a mindfulness course to people with cancer feasible, acceptable and of any benefit?Exploring the views and perspectives of analgesic medication for pain in people with dementia.Exploring the implementation of anaesthesia practices in Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Nepal and Bangladesh using a behavioural frameworkWhen health eating becomes unhealthy: Understanding orthorexia nervosa‘People sometimes think I’m like some old war veteran rabbiting on’: Narratives of those working on the HIV frontline.New year, new mii: A systematic review on the influence of digital avatars on health-related outcomesMy own personal hell: Approaching and exceeding thresholds of too much alcoholAcceptability of a healthy eating contract and goal setting intervention for people living in low socioeconomic areas‘I’m a person not a disorder.’ A phenomenological analysis exploring how employees with bipolar stay well at workDoubling up: Enhancing pluralistic research through the use of multimodal data. Contested phenomena and multiple perspectives.Racial and ethnic disparities in cortisol reactivity and the moderating role of discriminationExploring the staff perspective of the physical environment in a dementia specific care unit.‘Are computer-based treatment programmes effective at reducing symptoms of dual diagnosis within adults?’: A systematic reviewAre interventions delivered by healthcare professionals effective for weight management? A systematic review of systematic reviewsAn emotional journey – parents’ experiences of their child’s transfer to intensive careExamining potential biopsychosocial and health behaviour predictors of gestational weight gain: The Grown in Wales cohortA qualitative analysis of people’s health-based visions for their best possible future selvesEvaluating the impact of woodland activities on personal wellbeingImplementation of a healthy lifestyle intervention in Manchester primary schools: A qualitative studyUnderstanding health care workers’ experiences of an Ebola outbreak and attitudes to infection prevention control in Sierra LeoneExploring women’s weight-related health behaviours during pregnancy: A qualitative longitudinal studyDoes the NHS Diabetes Prevention Programme intervention have fidelity to the programme specification? A document analysisThe lived experience of men diagnosed with melanoma: A qualitative exploration using photo-elicitationEnhancing the wellbeing of caregivers of people with spinal cord injury with internet-delivered mindfulness: A feasibility studyDevelopment of a brief tailored digital intervention to facilitate help-seeking in patients with Parkinson’s: A feasibility studyIs demanding work fatiguing or energising? Three real-time studies of health care professionals.A look into the relationship of compensatory health beliefs, procrastination and body mass indexPatients’ experiences and perceptions of behaviour change advice delivered during routine GP consultations: A national surveyDigital remote pain reporting and administration perspectives in children and young people with juvenile idiopathic arthritisPain beliefs are associated with levels of reported pain in children and young people with juvenile idiopathic arthritisChanging safety behaviour on a global scale: A case study of L’Oréal’s ApproachDesigning a breastfeeding intervention for women with a BMI>30kg/m2 using a collaborative approachUnderstanding symptoms of myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome using scientific insights fromN-of-1 studiesNew MRC-NIHR guidance: Reducing bias due to measurement reactivity in studies of interventions to improve healthIntention to perform strength training exercise among Chinese elderly: The application of the Health Belief ModelExploring an individual experience of living with scoliosis in adults over 30: A photovoice study.Stigma and physical wellbeing: The mediating role of social support and self-esteem in young adults with chronic conditions.‘People don’t know how severe some of them can be’: An exploration of beliefs and attitudes in adolescents with food allergyChallenges and reflections; evaluating an intervention to facilitate shared decision-making in breast reconstruction (PEGASUS).Dementia and cognitive impairment in the older prison population: Designing theory and evidence based training for prison staffCapability, opportunity and motivation to prevent oral health problems through behaviour change talk in dental practiceRealising ‘teachable opportunities’ to promote lifestyle behaviours in routine postnatal consultationsUse of a biofeedback breathing app to augment poststress physiological recoveryBarriers and facilitators to delivering exercise to men with prostate cancer: Application of the theoretical domains frameworkDevelopment of an evidence-based intervention to address eating psychopathology in athletes: An intervention mapping approachDeliberating and reflecting upon what we know and how we know it in evidence-based healthcareMothers of teenage girls: Knowledge and understanding about human papillomavirus and cervical cancerBarriers and facilitors to primary care nursing professionals having ‘cancer early diagnosis-related discussions’ with patientsLack of referrals to pulmonary rehabilitation: Should we pay closer attention to healthcare professionals’ illness perceptions?Participants’ Experience of a Type 2 Diabetes Management Programme designed for British-South Asians: A Qualitative EvaluationA qualitative exploration of the experience of positive body image in breast cancer survivors‘It felt like unfinished business, it feels like that’s finished now’: Experiences around contralateral prophylactic mastectomyContralateral Prophylactic Mastectomy and the consultation: A snapshot of UK healthcare professionals’ views and experiencesHealth professionals perceptions of supporting exercise in men with prostate cancer: Applying the Theoretical Domains FrameworkWhat are the perceptions of patients and healthcare professionals about blood transfusion? An interview studySocial prescribing as ‘social cure’: Health benefits of social connectedness to practitioners and users of a social prescribing pathwaySupporting young people who have been parentally bereaved: Can physical activity help and what services are available?" Health Psychology Update 28, no. 3 (2019): 10–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.53841/bpshpu.2019.28.3.10.

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Rugwiji, Temba. "The quest for hermeneutics of appropriation as a thematic approach for critical biblical interpretation." HTS Teologiese Studies / Theological Studies 76, no. 1 (2020). http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/hts.v76i1.5392.

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This study attempts to promulgate a method called ‘hermeneutics of appropriation’ as a thematic approach of a scientific research. ‘Hermeneutics’ is not the same as ‘appropriation’; hermeneutics refers to a science of interpretation, whereas appropriation depicts an idea of adoption. Hermeneutics of appropriation employs themes (hence, thematic analysis) as opposed to contextual biblical hermeneutics that focuses largely on contemporary interpretation of biblical narratives. Thus, adopting the phrase ‘hermeneutics of appropriation’ presents the idea of a scientific interpretation of a theme th
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Shapley-Quinn, Mary Kate, Siyanda Tenza, Destry Jensen, et al. "Adolescent Girls and Young Women Overcoming Adherence Challenges with Vaginal and Oral PrEP Use: A Longitudinal Qualitative Study from a Crossover Trial in South Africa, Uganda, and Zimbabwe." AIDS and Behavior, September 30, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10461-024-04503-y.

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AbstractRates of HIV acquisition remain high among adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) in sub-Saharan Africa. We explored South African, Ugandan, and Zimbabwean AGYW’s experiences in a crossover trial of two HIV prevention products: Daily oral pre-exposure prophylaxis pills and a monthly dapivirine vaginal ring. A subset of participants (n = 25) across all sites completed up to three serial in-depth interviews (SIDIs). The SIDIs explored barriers to product use, coping strategies, and the resulting outcomes. Coded textual data were analyzed using a product acceptability conceptual framewor
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Ndhlovu, Mthokozisi Phathisani, and Phillip Santos. "Political corruption in Zimbabwe: News media, audiences and deliberative democracy." Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal, June 4, 2021, 174165902110224. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17416590211022416.

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Even though corruption by politicians and in politics is widespread worldwide, it is more pronounced in developing countries, such as Zimbabwe, where members of the political elite overtly abuse power for personal accumulation of wealth. Ideally, the news media, as watchdogs, are expected to investigate and report such abuses of power. However, previous studies in Zimbabwe highlight the news media’s polarised and normative inefficacies. Informed by the theoretical notion of deliberative democracy developed via Habermas and Dahlgren’s work and Hall’s Encoding, Decoding Model, this article uses
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Mutanga, Oliver. "Reflections on mental health, Ngozi, and the Dandemutande approach in Zimbabwe." African Journal of Disability 14 (June 9, 2025). https://doi.org/10.4102/ajod.v14i0.1599.

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Background: Western mental health models prioritise biomedical explanations and interventions at the expense of indigenous non-Western belief systems that offer culturally relevant understandings of mental health. In Zimbabwe, Ngozi [reconciliatory and restorative spirits] play a significant role in shaping mental health experiences and perceptions. This article introduces the Dandemutande [Spiderweb] approach, an innovative framework that responds to the limitations of solely relying on the Western-based mental health conceptualisation by considering a multidimensional approach that acknowled
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Cairns, Patrick, Sarah Boyd, and Kurt April. "The road less travelled: A Zimbabwean leadership dilemma." Case Writing Centre, University of Cape Town, Graduate School of Business, June 29, 2021, 1–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/caseuct-2021-000003.

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Subject area of the teaching case: The values-based leadership (VBL) themes lend the case to use in courses focussed on individual leadership approaches, personal-professional development, personal mastery, or individual agency in social change and social justice movements. The emerging market context adds a layer of complexity to the protagonist's journey, which may make the case especially relevant for use among students who work in this context or in courses that deal with volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity (VUCA). Student level: The primary target audience for this case is
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Dr. A. Annie Divya Mahisha. "The Hyena’s Gaze: Analyzing Animal Symbolism in Tsitsi Dangarembga’s This Mournable Body." International Quarterly Multidisciplinary Research Journal 1 (May 31, 2025). https://doi.org/10.71093/iqmrj.v1i2.202509.

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Tsitsi Dangarembga’s This Mournable Body is a profound exploration of post-colonial Zimbabwe, focusing on the personal and societal struggles faced by the protagonist, Tambudzai Sigauke. Throughout the novel, Dangarembga employs various symbols and metaphors to illustrate the psychological and emotional turmoil experienced by her characters. One of the most striking symbols in the novel is the hyena, which plays a crucial role in understanding the protagonist’s internal conflicts, the societal decay and the overarching themes of survival and moral degradation. This paper explores the role of t
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NDENGO, LISSA, and Bukaliya Richard. "FACTORS INFLUENCING THE PROLIFERATION OF UNREGISTERED EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT CENTRES IN MARONDERA URBAN DISTRICT, MASHONALAND EAST PROVINCE, ZIMBABWE." Sprin Journal of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, March 31, 2022, 156–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.55559/sjahss.v1i03.15.

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The study investigated the proliferation of unlicensed ECD (Early Childhood Development) Centres in Marondera Urban Ward 4. A sample of ten unlicensed ECD operators was drawn from a population of forty unlicensed ECD operators. The study was prompted by the high proliferation rate of the unlicensed ECD Centres in Marondera Urban Ward 4 for the past five years. Self-administered questionnaires were used to collect data from the unlicensed ECD operators. Interviews were used to collect data from Marondera Urban Ward 4 councillors and Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education (MoPSE) officer at
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