A critical analysis of public participation in the Integrated Development Plan of Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality in the Eastern Cape (2013)
- Authors: Langa, V G
- Date: 2013
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MPA
- Identifier: vital:11695 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1015064
- Description: This mini-dissertation critically analyses Public Participation relationship to Integrated Development Planning of the Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality. It analyses major theoretical trends in both fields’ history that have had a profound impact on the development of such relation. These include: politics-administration dichotomy, bureaucracy and democracy, theory and practice, and behavioralism. The literature on the models of public participation was extensively consulted in order to substantiate the thought and the practical views of the community members regarding the public participation on the integrated Development planning. Further consultation also took place on the Intergovernmental relations Framework in order to understand the expectations of the different spheres of government and the method in which they are to fulfill their constitutional obligation to support Municipalities as a service delivery of government. Respondents were identified by mean of sample selection. 10% of the total City Councillors were identified as respondents. Data was collected through the use of questionnaires, which were distributed to the respondents. All respondents were given three days to complete the questionnaires, where after they were collected by the researcher. Inclusive with the respondents was the Ward Committee members and community members; this made the total respondents to the total of 30. Permission was sought from the Council speaker prior to the questionnaires being distributed. The method of research of this study is mainly empirical research observation. However, a content analysis is conducted. The data collected include primary sources, such as scholarly publications in both fields, and other related material such the questionnaires that were distributed to sampled respondents. What has certainly become clear through this study is that change is necessary in the way local government currently does things for the benefit of the communities at large. The discipline of political science might not achieve the prestigious position it deserves inside the government and will not offer the appropriate programmes that communities need to serve in this government, until it can establish a better relationship with community. This research provides recommendations for extreme change from legislation compliant to service delivery driven. Once accomplished, these tasks might help in resolving the never end service delivery protest by the communities. It further outlines the need to capacitate the ward committees as well as ward councillors at large to make sure they are able to undertake the task at hand.
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- Date Issued: 2013
Analysis of leadership and management challenges facing school principals in Circuit no. 12 of the King William's Town District of the Eastern Cape Province
- Authors: Ngangelizwe, Nomakaya Orrienda
- Date: 2012
- Subjects: School management and organization -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , School principals -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Education and state -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Educational leadership -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , King William's Town (South Africa)
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MPA
- Identifier: vital:11653 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/d1006981 , School management and organization -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , School principals -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Education and state -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , Educational leadership -- South Africa -- Eastern Cape , King William's Town (South Africa)
- Description: Within the South African context, because of political and social changes and the influence caused by these changes on educational structures, the new and high demands are required from school principals. Principals now find it necessary to make choices and take decisions .Unfortunately they are not equipped sufficiently to make careful decisions in meeting constitutional demands (Niehaus & Myburgh, 1999). According to Evans (1997:20) (as cited by Schoeman, 2006) the establishment of suitable institutions is sufficient in keeping a free and democratic society, world events (fascism in Japan, Italy, Germany,1920s-1930s;cold war in Europe, 1940s-1980s are there to remind us that even the best –designed institutions are not sufficient. A free and democratic society is dependent on knowledge, skills and virtues of its citizens (IDASA 1999:2). Brown and Duku, 2008 contend that when SASA was introduced, it was of the idea that it would create a new school governance landscape (Naidoo, 2005). Criticisms are blaming the SASA for the tensions that exist in school governance. SASA is viewed as steeply middle- class in identity and is accused of normalising parental participation in school governance in middle-class terms. Another criticism is on the assumption that parents should have the resources and time to spend on school activities (Dyer &Rose, 2005; Fakir, 2003; Sayed & Soudien, 2005). When criticisms against this Act were taken stock of in the context of socio-economic realities of many communities in rural locations in SA, it is difficult to disagree. The report of the Ministerial Review Committee cited socio-economic related difficulties as paralysing how parents participate in school governance in rural communities (Ministerial Review Study, 2004).
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- Date Issued: 2012