Dependency, Instability And Shifting Global Power...

Africa Policy International relations Trackbacks (0)

Influences and Interests in African Foreign Policy in the 21st Century /by Ross Herbert

SAIIA Occasional Paper No 95, September 2011

Trade relations, strategic military balances, the Eastern bloc and Russia, China, Europe, the Cold War and post-Cold War issues have long dominated global studies of foreign policy. In this environment Africa has been little more than an after-thought, or at best the passive object of other nations’ foreign policies. One consequence of the ending of the Cold War and the subsequent, much discussed ‘uni-polar moment’ has been a renewed interest in multilateral institutions as instruments to restrain unilateral state action. Although still not strong in any military sense or as decisive in action as a nation-state, the United Nations has attracted followers while in trade, economic policy, peacekeeping and crisis intervention, there has been a shift in influence of great consequence to foreign policy practitioners. This is the recognition that the United States and Europe remain highly influential but in power and normative terms can no longer take unilateral action.

In today’s more consensus-orientated world, unilateral coalitions of the willing still can and do act; but greater consideration is being given to the views and policies of nations formerly ignored by the great powers. In many forums African states – which together represent a quarter of all the nations on earth – have a new relevance in international affairs. Of course, they continue to be financially dependent and rarely have the clout to mount spirited foreign policy initiatives. But their votes matter; and Africa is highly relevant to global concerns over issues such as energy security, conflict prevention, terrorism, drug smuggling, illegal immigration, financial regulation, money laundering, development, disease, minerals, wildlife conservation and climate change. The world is still far from coming together as a global village but there have been important moves away from the Hobbesian state of nature that in centuries past, permitted unrestrained conflict between nations.

In this slowly shifting context, it is important to reconsider the dynamics, policy priorities and strategic interests that drive African nations’ foreign policy. Africa may not be leading global debates, but its views certainly are of greater consequence than hitherto, given the greater deference of global institutions to consensus decision-making and regional bloc representation.
Download - English [.pdf]

SA'S NATIONAL CLIMATE CHANGE RESPONSE WHITE PAPER

Climate Change Policy South Africa Trackbacks (0)

South Africa’s National Climate Change Response Policy, which was approved by Cabinet this week, would help the country map out a socioeconomic transition to a climate-resilient and low-carbon economy and society, Minister of Water and Environmental Affairs Edna Molewa said on Friday.

The policy would seek to balance the objectives of job creation, economic growth, environmental sustainability and reducing carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions...

From Polity.org.za

Link to full white paper:

http://www.parliament.gov.za/content/2011-10-12%20The%20National%20Climate%20Change%20Response%20White%20Paper~1.pdf

Africa Portal

Africa Policy Trackbacks (0)
The Africa Portal is an online knowledge resource for policy-related issues on Africa. An undertaking by the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI), Makerere University (MAK), and the South African Institute of International Affairs (SAIIA), the Africa Portal offers open access to a suite of features including an online library collection; a resource for opinion and analysis; an experts directory; an international events calendar; and a mobile technology component—all aimed to equip users with research and information on Africa’s current policy issues.

A key feature to the Africa Portal is the online library collection holding over 3,000 books, journals, and digital documents related to African policy issues. The entire online repository is open access and available for free full-text download. A portion of the digital documents housed in the library have been digitized for the first time as an undertaking of the Africa Portal project. Facilitating new digitization projects is a core feature of the Africa Portal, which aims to improve access and visibility for African research.

The Africa Portal is part of the Africa Initiative project.

http://www.africaportal.org/

AGRICULTURE POLICIES IN AFRICA: IMPLICATIONS AND LIMITATIONS FOR DEVELOPMENT

Africa Development Policy Agriculture Trackbacks (0)

By Leslie Nyagah, Agricultural Researcher and Project Manager, ECONOMIC GOVERNANCE PROGRAMME / IDASA

SUMMARY
The global narrative on access to food, improved agricultural productivity and how to feed the future has captured the attention of many developed and developing economies that are now grappling with the daunting realities of a stressed and precarious food security system. The magnitude of this reality has conjured an emotive script that places a global challenge right at the doorstep of every country on how financial and political resources should be used to provide adequate and nutritious food for future generations. But this concern is neither new nor surprising since there has been a slow progressive movement towards addressing global food insecurity in recent years, especially against the backdrop of mounting natural, political and socio-economic pressures such as political conflict over natural resources, water stresses, global economic  downturn and concerns on the ability of developing countries to achieve the United Nations Millennium Development Goals

Click on the Link to open the  full text 

Medium Term Budget Policy Statement,South African Finance Minister, 27/10/2010

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Source: The TreasuryTitle: SA: Gordhan: Medium Term Budget Policy Statement by the South African Finance Minister, National Assembly

Former President Mandela once said: "After climbing a great hill, one only finds that there are many more hills to climb!"
As a youthful nation, we have had our fair share of hills to climb. Our successful hosting of the World Cup earlier this year is surely proof that no hill is too steep. As we move out of the depth of the greatest recession since the 1930s, we find yet another hill facing us - the highest, perhaps, we have yet had to climb. This is the creation of jobs and the reduction of poverty.
Honourable Members, today is the birthday anniversary of Oliver Tambo, who dedicated his life to these goals.
In taking this struggle forward, Cabinet has this week released details of a new growth path that sets out a vision and outlines key areas where jobs can be created. This is an agenda for collective action by the state, business,organised labour and civil society - in fact all South Africans have an interest n energising and activating the growth path...[More

http://us-cdn.creamermedia.co.za/assets/articles/attachments/30409_speech.pdf

Economics Of Ecosystems And Biodiversity For National And International Policy Makers. UNEP

Policy Environment Trackbacks (0)

UNEP: A report titled The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity for National and International Policy Makers has been released.The TEEB D1 Report for policy makers reflects on the fact that failing to account for the value of ecosystems and biodiversity, we will make the wrong choices in responding to challenges. It demonstrates that understanding and capturing the value of ecosystems can lead to better informed and possibly different decisions.

From UN Pulse :

Permanent Link: UNEP:The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB)

Shoot To Kill: Licence To Murder Or Effective Crime Strategy? Centre For Conflict Resolution Public Dialogue

Policy Crime South Africa Trackbacks (0)
Shoot to Kill: Licence To Murder or Effective Crime Strategy?

 

THE CENTRE FOR CONFLICT RESOLUTION, Cape Town, South Africa, invites you and members of your organisation

to this public dialogue seminar

 

CHAIR:  Justice Dennis Davis

           Judge President, Competition Appeal Court,  Pretoria

 

SPEAKERS:

     Mr Fikile Mbalula

    Deputy Minister of Police,  Pretoria

 

   Mr David Bruce

   Specialist Researcher,  The Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation

 

DATE:

 Wednesday, 21 April 2010

 

TIME:

 17h30 to 19h00

 

VENUE:

 Centre for the Book, 62 Queen Victoria Street, Gardens, Cape Town

 

RSVP:  Lavenia Benjamin

 TEL:

 (021) 689 1005

 

E-MAIL:

 lavenia@ccr.uct.ac.za

 

WEBSITE:  www.ccr.org.za

 

 All are welcome and entry is free.

 

 Kindly RSVP for seating purposes.

Connecting The Dots [Pdf]. Demos Thinktank

Policy Trackbacks (0)
The Demos thinktank organization is based in London, and they never shy away from the tough topics. This 108-page paper released in November 2009 is titled "Connecting the Dots" and was written by Demos staff members Jake Chapman, Charlie Edwards, and Simon Hampson. This paper "offers an approach premised on learning and adaptation, which demands that politicians and policymakers be prepared to embrace uncertainty and complexity." It does this by taking a close look at three very complex and intractable policy issues: illicit drugs in Mexico, London gang crime, and climate change. The report includes five separate chapters, along with a section of references. For anyone looking for a compelling voice in the wide world of public policy and related matters, this paper is an excellent find. [KMG]  From Scout Report

http://www.demos.co.uk/files/Connecting_the_dots_-_web-2.pdf?1259947418

IMF Direct

Policy Economic conditions and policy IMF Trackbacks (0)
iMFdirect is a group blog covering the global economy and policy issues, produced by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in the United States. It posts content related to the IMF s work in economics and finance at global or national level, and posts currently highlight the debate over policy responses to the biggest global recession since the Great Depression. It covers topics such as financial regulation, economic growth, LICs (low income countries), emerging markets and debt relief. The blog includes links to recent comments and postings, a blogroll of links to related blogs, access to items by subject / tag and links to other IMF content. http://blog-imfdirect.imf.org/  From Intute.ac.uk

International Growth Centre (IGC)

Development Policy Trackbacks (0)

The International Growth Centre (IGC) "promotes sustainable growth in developing countries by providing demand-led policy advice based on frontier research". The IGC is directed and organized from hubs at the London School of Economics and the University of Oxford and comprises country offices across the developing world and a global network of partners. The IGC was initiated by and is funded by DFID (Department For International Development). Research is carried out across ten programmes from agriculture to trade, while country based information currently features Ethiopia, Ghana and Tanzania. The website includes more information on the work, events and people of the IGC, as well as listing recent documents, audio interviews and news items. http://www.internationalgrowthcentre.org

From Intute.ac.uk

EU Foreign Policy Resource Guide

Policy International relations European Union Trackbacks (0)

Exploring EU foreign policy resource guide

http://soc.kuleuven.be/iieb/eufp/

This excellent resource guide is coordinated by Stephan Keukeleire Professor in European Foreign Policy at the University of Leuven. It serves as a guide to researching EU foreign policy for students as well as a companion to the textbook The Foreign Policy of the European Union by Stephan Keukeleire and Jennifer MacNaughtan (Palgrave 2008).It is divided into a number of thematic topics including: the history of EU foreign policy, the key actors, EU policy making processes, the EU Common Foreign and Security policy and beyond. Each section highlights and provides links to key EU documents, organisations and key research institutions. It also offers free access to PowerPoint presentations, Updated figures and tables on EU foreign policy and classroom resources for teachers associated with the textbook. Copyright and technical information is displayed on the website.From Intute.ac.uk

IDEAS: Diplomacy And Strategy@LSE

Policy International relations Trackbacks (0)
Housed at the London School of Economics and Political Science, the IDEAS center is dedicated to using the School's "unique resources for understanding international events in order to develop research and training programmes that can help us recognize how today's world came into being and how it may be changed." For persons interested in international affairs and policy, this site will be a delightful treat, and visitors can meander through their weblog, "Who's who" area, and calendar of events. The "IDEAS Reports" section is an area that should not be missed, and users can read and download top-notch reports such as "Prospects for Reform? The Iranian Elections" and "Afghanistan: Now You See Me?" The site is rounded out by the "Programmes" area which describes IDEAS' current research on the Cold War, Latin America, and the Balkans. [KMG] From Scout Report

http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/IDEAS/

State Of The Nation..., And More. Polity.Org.Za, 5th June 2009

Policy South Africa Political parties Trackbacks (0)

State of the Nation and responses to this speech:

State of the Nation address, June 3, 2009

President JG Zuma delivers his State of the Nation address at a Joint Sitting of Parliament, Cape Town.

In this video clip, Dr Paul-Simon Handy, of the Institute for Security Studies, speaks to Polity's Amy Witherden about what he calls the "recurring myth of African unity".

 

Dr Paul-Simon Handy joined the African Security Analysis Programme in the ISS Tshwane (Pretoria) office in June 2007 and currently serves as programme head. Paul-Simon served as consultant for several German development organisations. Prior to that he was a visiting fellow with the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP) in Berlin and also lectured at the department of political science of the Free University of Berlin. He has published on issues related to Europe-Africa relationships as well as fragile statehood in Africa. He holds a PhD of the University of Leipzig (Germany) and MA of the University of Yaoundé (Cameroon). phandy@issafrica.org

Below is the original opinion piece on which this discussion was based.

It has become a tradition in Africa and among its Diaspora to celebrate Pan-Africanism on 25 May, Africa Day. On this day, Africans across the world reaffirm the aspiration for unity that formed the basis for many of the struggles in the continent's recent history.
But is there much to celebrate this 25 May? Does Pan-Africanism carry the same meaning today as in colonial and immediate post-colonial times? It is clear that Pan-Africanism has been misdirected, and has become an ideology with symbolic rather than concrete objectives. The idea of Pan-Africanism should be revisited, with the aim of reorienting it towards service delivery, performance and efficient governance.

Despite the tangible successes the African Union (AU) has enjoyed in its brief history -- its impressive record in organising a collective security framework with a peace and security architecture and its growing importance as a generator of common norms to regulate an African way of "living together" -- paradoxically it appears that the idea of Pan-Africanism is in a deep crisis. This conclusion is based on more than a criticism of the flamboyant excesses of the current President of the AU, who in many aspects symbolises the antithesis of all the major achievements of the last decades. Rather, the perceived crisis of Pan-Africanism derives largely from the persistence of the myth of African unity, which paralyses African dynamism within the continent and, increasingly, in international forums. The consequence is the absence of an efficient and respected body to lead the continent intellectually, politically and economically by authority and example.

If there is a commonly shared belief among much of the African intellectual and political elite, to the extent that it has become a dogma, it is what we can term the myth of African unity. This myth is derived directly from the African experience of the colonial period; it is a collective reflex of the weak, which suggests that by uniting, Africans can resist the colonial and neo-colonial hegemony. It is principally a reactive idea, born of the painful African experience of colonization. It has generated a huge body of literature, which constitutes the foundation of academic and political Pan-Africanism. This mythology constitutes the driving ideology of the AU, even though many have forgotten that the birth of its progenitor, the Organisation of African Unity, represented the failure of Kwame Nkrumah's ‘African unity' dream. The most recent product generated by the Pan-Africanist dogma is the African unity government, championed by Libya and its President. This myth has become dominant and in some ways even totalitarian, in that it has become difficult to question the usefulness of an African Union Government without being considered an enemy of Africa. However, most defenders of the ‘African unity' government are unable to articulate logically why a continental bureaucratic monolith would be in any better position to solve issues of socio-economic delivery than national and local structures.

Proponents of the highly symbolic idea of ‘African unity' generally proceed from two highly debatable postulates. The first of these is that Africa's artificial borders lie at the root of most of the continent's problems. The second is the assumption that race, linguistic parenthood and a common past of suffering make us automatically brothers and sisters who share the same values and ambitions. These two arguments of the Pan-Africanist mythology are erroneous. This does not mean that African states' borders are not artificial, nor do I intend to contradict the legacy of the respected Senegalese historian and Egyptologist Cheikh Anta Diop by proclaiming that African cultures are not linked by a profound common substrate. The two principal arguments of academic and populist Pan-Africanism are in error because of the conclusions they imply.

Since the modern state began its successful career of expansion after the Westphalia treaty in 1648, states' borders have generally been shaped by wars, treaties and other encounters. In short, there are no natural borders in the modern world. States' borders are by definition artificial and the only difference in Africa's case is that these artificial borders drawn by non-Africans. So it is less the artificiality of the borders than their heteronomy, their reflection of a foreign agenda that could be problematic. Even here, however, there is no African exceptionalism, as the same principle also applied to Latin America following Spanish colonisation. In reality, artificial borders are in and of themselves neither good nor bad. The only certainties are that they exist and have generated deeply rooted national identities that have to be taken into account in any serious attempt to create unity. Although the African Union is itself a combination of national states, adepts of the African unity still consider African states to be an accident of history.

Regarding the link between Pan-Africanism and race and linguistic community, the numerous wars, violent conflicts and even genocide across the continent amply demonstrate that there is no transcendental sense of brotherhood unifying Africans. Rwanda and Somalia remind us that sharing a common language, history and culture affords no protection against barbarism. Basing a sublimated unity on race and culture is to ignore the reality of contemporary Africa, which is more than just black, rural and consensus-oriented. The century-long presence of whites in Southern and Northern Africa, of Indians in East Africa and of "Arabs" throughout the continent indicates a more cosmopolitan, diverse and integrated continent than many of the apostles of ‘Blackness" would like to acknowledge.

Unity does not necessarily need sentimentalism and geography to be effective. It rather needs values and norms; shared beliefs in specific rules of the game, which still have to be invented.

In reality, the Pan-Africanist myth is the profound expression of a deep-seated African "lamentation", which makes it difficult for Africans to think about a post-post colonial time in which we cease to become mere objects fated by historical circumstance, and strive to become the agents and shapers of our destiny. The intellectual constructions around race and artificial borders have not yet generated shared values around the continent after some fifty years of independence. That Africa's leaders are now discussing the creation of a continental government structure, despite our inability successfully to manage our local and village councils and other small-scale governments is telling.

Neither race, history nor widespread under-development are sustainable grounds for unity. The real foundation of African unity should be based on efficient governance norms and practices, democratic consensus and economic prosperity. Literature indicates today that though there is no direct causal relationship between these three concepts, each constitutes a good in its own right. To be effective, these norms do not require the support of a Pan-Africanist ideology caught up in the toils of obsolete and misguided debate.

Since the Pan-Africanist ideology has been unable to articulate a vision beyond hollow concepts such as "Ubuntu" or other collective therapeutic slogans, because sentimentalism and mythology instead of ideas and scholarship continue to dominate the African unity debate, there is an urgent need to revisit the Pan-Africanism. A possible way to do so is to revisit the African unity debate along the utilitarian lines of efficiency, common values and service delivery, thus bringing the idea of African unity back to the people and avoiding the elitist trap in which Pan-Africanist discussions are caught. The Pan-Africanist dream has to be articulated along material (trade, ‘free' movement across borders, better communications between countries, access to each others good and services) and immaterial (establishing the conditions for the rule of law, peace and security) incentives that will make sense to the common man.

One of the weakest links of the Pan- Africanist discussion today is that it is not accompanied by a sound scholarly debate on African integration. Such discussion is currently dominated by politicians, development agencies and certain scholars scattered around the world, and has failed to produce a structured research area within which various and contending schools of thought may find expression. With the notable exception of the South-Africa based African Renaissance Centre and maybe the Julius Nyerere Chair at the University of Dar es Salam there is no credible African Integration research centre in the continent (and yet they exist in Europe and the US) able to provide policy-makers with research based analysis and policy-options on African unity and integration. For all their faults the African renaissance debate and Nepad attempted to address these issues but were later caught up in the current logic of false consensus.

Modernising the discussion about African integration, and giving it a deeper analytical substance, would allow for the exploration of new ideas and options. Without deeply involving African thinking and thinkers, without a critical interrogation of the major assumptions and postulates of the Pan-Africanist myth, African unity will remain an elitist idea and aspiration. The complexity of development challenges and the needs of Africa's peoples deserve and require far better than this.

By: Dr Paul-Simon Handy, Head of the African Security Analysis Programme, Institute for Security Studies, Tshwane (Pretoria)

State Of The Nation Address By His Excellency JG Zuma, President Of The Republic Of South Africa

Policy South Africa Trackbacks (0)
State of the Nation - actual text

State of the Nation Address by His Excellency JG Zuma, President of the Republic of South Africa, Joint Sitting of Parliament, Cape Town

3 June 2009

Honourable Speaker;
Chairperson of the National Council of Provinces;
Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly and Deputy Chairperson of the NCOP;
Deputy President of the Republic, Kgalema Motlanthe
Former President of the Republic, Thabo Mbeki,
Our icon, the First President of a democratic South Africa, Isithwalandwe Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela,
Former Deputy Presidents,
Distinguished Premiers and Speakers of our Provinces;
Esteemed members of the Judiciary;
Chairperson of SALGA, mayors and leaders in our system of local government;
Chairperson of the National House of Traditional Leaders and our honoured traditional leaders;
Heads of Chapter 9 Institutions;
Governor of the Reserve Bank,
Religious leaders,
Directors-General and other leaders of the public service;
President of the Pan African Parliament, Honourable Idriss Endele Moussa,
Your Excellencies Ambassadors and High Commissioners;
Distinguished guests, comrades and friends;
Fellow South Africans,

Dumelang, Abusheni, Molweni,

On the 22nd of April, millions of South Africans went out to cast their votes. They exercised their democratic right spurred on by the desire to change their lives for the better.

In their overwhelming numbers, they confirmed that working together we can do more to fight poverty and build a better life for all.

They were encouraged by the vision of an inclusive society, a South Africa that belongs to all, a nation united in its diversity, a people working together for the greater good of all.

We are humbled by this decisive electoral mandate given by the people of our country, who have chosen their government in a most convincing manner.

Honourable Members,

Our nation has over the past few years gone through very challenging times.

It is thanks to the fact that we have a strong and fully functional constitutional democratic system, with solid institutions, that we overcame these difficulties smoothly and with dignity.

Today’s occasion is a celebration of what makes this democracy work. It is also a celebration of our culture of continuity and collective responsibility.

This is evidenced by the presence here of our icon Madiba, who laid the foundation for the country’s achievements, and that of former President Thabo Mbeki, who built on that foundation.

The continuity is also evident in the fact that former President Kgalema Motlanthe is now the Deputy President of the Republic, after a seamless transition, making us a unique country in many respects.

Fellow South Africans,

As you would be aware, the fight against poverty remains the cornerstone of our government’s focus.

On the 9th of May, during the Presidential inauguration, we made a commitment to our people and the world that:

“For as long as there are South Africans who die from preventable disease;

For as long as there are workers who struggle to feed their families and who battle to find work;

For as long as there are communities without clean water, decent shelter or proper sanitation;

For as long as there are rural dwellers unable to make a decent living from the land on which they live;

For as long as there are women who are subjected to discrimination, exploitation or abuse;

For as long as there are children who do not have the means nor the opportunity to receive a decent education;

We shall not rest, and we dare not falter, in our drive to eradicate poverty."

In pursuit of these goals, our government has identified 10 priority areas, which form part of our Medium Term Strategic Framework for 2009 to 2014.

The programme is being introduced under difficult economic conditions. The past year has seen the global economy enter a period of crisis unprecedented in recent decades.

While South Africa has not been affected to the extent that a number of other countries have, its effects are now being clearly seen in our economy. We have entered a recession.

It is more important now than ever that we work in partnership on a common programme to respond to this crisis.

We take as our starting point the framework for South Africa's response to the international economic crisis, concluded by government, labour and business in February this year. We must act now to minimise the impact of this downturn on those most vulnerable.

We have begun to act to reduce job losses. There is an agreement in principle between government and the social partners on the introduction of a training layoff.

Workers who would ordinarily be facing retrenchment due to economic difficulty would be kept in employment for a period of time and re-skilled.

Discussion on the practical detail is continuing between the social partners and the institutions that would be affected by such an initiative, including the Sector Education and Training Authorities.

We will support the work of the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) to assist employers and workers to find alternatives to retrenchments through the relevant legal process.

To date, CCMA commissioners have saved over four thousand jobs through facilitation processes, and provided ongoing advice and support to retrenched workers.

The Industrial Development Corporation has developed a programme to fund companies in distress. We will also ensure that government buys more goods and services locally, without undermining our global competitiveness or pushing up costs beyond acceptable levels.

Building on the successes of our industrial policy interventions, a scaled up Industrial Policy Action Plan will be developed.

The lead sectors already identified are automobile, chemicals, metal fabrication, tourism, clothing and textiles as well as forestry. In addition, attention will also be paid to services, light manufacturing and construction, amongst others, in the quest to create decent jobs.

As part of Phase 2 of the Expanded Public Works Programme, the Community Work Programme will be fast-tracked.

It offers a minimum level of regular work to those who need it, while improving the quality of life in communities.

The economic downturn will affect the pace at which our country is able to address the social and economic challenges it faces. But it will not alter the direction of our development.

The policy priorities that we have identified, and the plans that we placed before the electorate, remain at the core of the programme of this government.

Laat ons mekaar se hande vat, en saam oplossings vind in die gees van 'n Suid Afrikaanse gemeenskap. Die tyd het gekom om harder te werk. Ons regering gaan vorentoe kyk, nie agtertoe nie!

The steps outlined in our Medium Term Strategic Framework had to take into account the constraints posed by the economic crisis. The downturn should not cause us to change these plans. Instead it should urge us to implement these with speed and determination.

The Framework focuses on 10 priorities.
We make a commitment that working together, we will speed up economic growth and transform the economy to create decent work and sustainable livelihoods.

We will introduce a massive programme to build economic and social infrastructure. We will develop and implement a comprehensive rural development strategy linked to land and agrarian reform and food security.

We will strengthen the skills and human resource base. We will improve the health profile of all South Africans.

Working together with all South Africans, we will intensify the fight against crime and corruption. We will build cohesive, caring and sustainable communities.

Working with Africa and the rest of the world, we will pursue African advancement and enhanced international co-operation.
We will ensure sustainable resource management and use.

And, working with the people and supported by our public servants, we will build a developmental state, improve public services and strengthen democratic institutions.

It is my pleasure and honour to highlight the key elements of our programme of action.

The creation of decent work will be at the centre of our economic policies and will influence our investment attraction and job-creation initiatives.

In line with our undertakings, we have to forge ahead to promote a more inclusive economy.

In this regard, we will utilise state levers such as procurement, licensing and financial support to assist small medium enterprises as well as to promote the implementation of Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment and affirmative action policies.

The implementation will be done in recognition of the need to correct the imbalances of the past.

The transformation will be undertaken in support of women, youth and people with disabilities.

We will reduce the regulatory burden on small businesses. The matter of being stifled by regulations has been raised by the sector several times.

In another intervention to create an enabling environment for investment, government will move towards a single integrated business registration system.

This will improve customer service and reduce the cost of doing business in South Africa.

Another important element of our drive to create job opportunities is the Expanded Public Works Programme (EPWP). The initial target of one million jobs has been achieved.

The second phase of the programme aims to create about four million job opportunities by 2014.

Between now and December 2009, we plan to create about 500 000 job opportunities.

While creating an environment for jobs and business opportunities, government recognises that some citizens will continue to require state social assistance. Social grants remain the most effective form of poverty alleviation. As of 31 March 2009, more than 13 million people received social grants, more than 8 million of whom are children.

We are mindful of the need to link the social grants to jobs or economic activity in order to encourage self-reliance amongst the able-bodied.

Most importantly during this period, neighbours should assist each other.

Jwale ke nako yakopano. Are thusaneng jwale ka baahisane.

Are dumalaneng hore ho sebane le ngwana ya tla robalang ka tlala hobane batswadi bahae bafeletswe ke mosebetsi. Hare ka kopana ra sebetsa kaofela re ka etsa ho feta mo.

Distinguished guests, as part of the second strategic priority we will continue with our programme to build economic and social infrastructure.
The newly-formed Infrastructure Development Cluster of government will ensure that the planned R787 billion infrastructure expenditure as provided for in the budget earlier this year is properly planned for and executed.

This funding includes allocations for the school building programme, public transport including the bus rapid transit system, housing, water and sanitation.

One of the biggest infrastructure investment projects is in the 2010 FIFA Soccer World Cup. We have, as government and the nation at large, pledged that the World Cup will leave a proud legacy from which Our children and our communities will benefit for many years to come.

We are on track to meet all our obligations and are determined to give the world the best World Cup ever.

We are putting all systems in place to make the Confederations Cup, which kicks off on the 14th of June, a huge success.

In April this year, I gave an undertaking to the taxi industry leadership to defer negotiations relating to the operation of the Bus Integrated Rapid Transit system until after the elections.

We undertook to allow more time to deal properly with the concerns of the industry. On the 11th of June the Minister of Transport will resume discussions with the industry.

The meeting will kick-start a series of engagements with the stakeholders affected by the BRT system. We are confident that unresolved issues will be dealt with to the satisfaction of all parties.

This will include the important issue of how all stakeholders will benefit from the initiative.

Honourable Members,

Another development which should boost the World Cup is the roll-out of the digital broadcasting infrastructure and signal distribution transmitters.

Overall, we will ensure that the cost of telecommunications is reduced through the projects underway to expand broadband capacity.

We have to ensure that we do not leave rural areas behind in these exciting developments.

As part of social infrastructure development we will provide suitably located and affordable housing and decent human settlements.

We will proceed from the understanding that human settlement is not just about building houses.

It is about transforming our cities and towns and building cohesive, sustainable and caring communities with closer access to work and social amenities, including sports and recreation facilities.

In this spirit, we will work with Parliament to speed up the processing of the Land Use Management Bill.

Working together with our people in the rural areas, we will ensure a comprehensive rural development strategy linked to land and agrarian reform and food security, as our third priority.

I would like to use this opportunity to extend our condolences to the family of the former Deputy Minister of Agriculture, Dirk du Toit, who passed away this week. His contribution will be sorely missed.

Abantu basemakhaya nabo banelungelo lokuba nogesi namanzi, izindlu zangasese ezigijima amanzi, imigwaqo, izindawo zokuqeda isizungu nezemidlalo kanye nezindawo zokuthenga eziphucukile njengasemadolobheni.

Nabo banelungelo lokusizwa kwezolimo ukuze bazitshalele imifino nokunye, bafuye nemfuyo bakwazi ukuziphilisa.

Sizimisele ukuwuqala lomkhankaso wokwakha izingqalasizinda ezindaweni zasemakhaya. Uma sibambisene nezakhamizi, amakhosi, amakhansela nezinduna siyokwazi ukuwusheshisa lomsebenzi.

Sicela abahlala ezindaweni zasemakhaya baqale balungiselele ukutshela uhulumeni ukuthi yiziphi izinto abazidinga ngokushesha.
Uma sisebenza ngokubambisana sizokwenza okuningi.

Hon. Speaker and Chairperson,

While having drawn the necessary lessons from earlier rural development initiatives, we have chosen the Greater Giyani Local Municipality in Limpopo as the first of the pilot projects for the campaign. Out of these projects will emerge lessons for the whole country.

In addition, we will work on the targeted renewal of rural towns, through grants such as the Neighbourhood Development Grant programme. In this way, areas around the towns will benefit from the economic boost.

With all these interventions, we are poised to change the face of rural areas in our country.

Compatriots,

Education will be a key priority for the next five years. We want our teachers, learners and parents to work with government to turn our schools into thriving centres of excellence.

The Early Childhood Development programme will be stepped up, with the aim of ensuring universal access to Grade R and doubling the number of 0-4 year old children by 2014.

We reiterate our non-negotiables. Teachers should be in school, in class, on time, teaching, with no neglect of duty and no abuse of pupils! The children should be in class, on time, learning, be respectful of their teachers and each other, and do their homework.

To improve school management, formal training will be a pre-condition for promoting teachers to become principals or heads of department.
I will meet school principals to share our vision on the revival of our education system.

Fellow South Africans,

We will increase our efforts to encourage all pupils to complete their secondary education.

The target is to increase enrolment rates in secondary schools to 95 per cent by 2014. We are also looking at innovative measures to bring back into the system pupils who dropped out of school, and to provide support.

Honourable Members, we are very concerned about reports of teachers who sexually harass and abuse children, particularly girls.

We will ensure that the Guidelines on Sexual Harassment and Violence in Public Schools are widely disseminated, and that learners and teachers are familiar with and observe them.

We will take very serious, and very decisive, action against any teachers who abuse their authority and power by entering into sexual relationships with children.

To promote lifelong learning, the Adult Basic Education and Training Kha ri Gude programme will be intensified.

Compatriots, Honourable Members,

We have to ensure that training and skills development initiatives in the country respond to the requirements of the economy.

The Further Education and Training sector with its 50 colleges and 160 campuses nationally will be the primary site for skills development training.

We will improve the access to higher education of children from poor families and ensure a sustainable funding structure for universities.

Fellow South Africans,
We are seriously concerned about the deterioration of the quality of healthcare, aggravated by the steady increase in the burden of disease in the past decade and a half.

We have set ourselves the goals of further reducing inequalities in healthcare provision, to boost human resource capacity, revitalise hospitals and clinics and step up the fight against the scourge of HIV and AIDS, tuberculosis (TB) and other diseases.

We must work together to improve the implementation of the Comprehensive Plan for the Treatment, Management and Care of HIV and AIDS so as to reduce the rate of new HIV infections by 50% by the year 2011. We want to reach 80% of those in need of ARV treatment also by 2011.

We will introduce a National Health Insurance scheme in a phased and incremental manner. In order to initiate the NHI, the urgent rehabilitation of public hospitals will be undertaken through Public-Private Partnerships.

We are also paying urgent attention to the issues of remuneration of health professionals to remove uncertainty in our health services.
Working together let us do more to promote quality healthcare, in line with the United Nations Millennium Development Goals to halve poverty by 2014.

Fellow citizens,

Together we must do more to fight crime. Our aim is to establish a transformed, integrated, modernised, properly-resourced and well-managed criminal justice system.

It is also critically important to improve the efficiency of the courts and the performance of prosecutors and to enhance detective, forensic and intelligence services. This work has started in earnest, and it will be undertaken with new energy and vigour.

Among the immediate targets is to ensure that we increase the number of prosecutors and Legal Aid Board personnel. We will do the same with police detectives.

We changed the name of the relevant Ministry from Safety and Security to Police to emphasise that we want real operational energy in police work. This will contribute to the reduction of serious and violent crimes by the set target of 7% to 10% per annum.

The most serious attention will also be given to combating organised crime, as well as crimes against women and children.

Honourable Speaker and Chairperson,

While appreciating the investment of the private sector in the security industry, we will improve the regulation of this industry.

Amongst other key initiatives, we will start the process of setting up a Border Management Agency; we shall intensify our efforts against cyber crime and identity theft, and improve systems in our jails to reduce repeat offending.

Compatriots,

I wish to underline our support for the continued transformation of the judiciary.

The transformation should address key issues such as the enhancement of judicial independence, entrenching internal systems of judicial accountability as well as ensuring full access to justice by all.

The success of the democratic system as a whole depends on good relations of mutual respect and a spirit of partnership among the Executive, the Legislature and the Judiciary. This is very important for our constitutional democracy.

Honourable Speaker and Chairperson,

We have repeatedly stated our commitment to fight corruption in the public service.

We will pay particular attention to combating corruption and fraud in procurement and tender processes, application for drivers’ licences, social grants, identity documents (IDs), and theft of police case dockets.

Let me emphasise that we all have a role to play in this war against crime.

We must actively participate in Community Policing Forums. We must stop buying stolen goods, which encourages crime.

We must report crime and assist the police with information to catch wrongdoers. In this way, we will move forward towards a crime-free society.

Honourable Members, since 1994 we have sought to create a united cohesive society out of our fragmented past. We are called upon to continue this mission of promoting unity in diversity and to develop a shared value system, based on the spirit of community solidarity and a caring society.

Our shared value system should encourage us to become active citizens in the renewal of our country. We must build a common national identity and patriotism.

We must develop a common attachment to our country, our Constitution and the national symbols. In this spirit, we will promote the National Anthem and our country’s flag and all other national symbols.

Our children, from an early age, must be taught to pay allegiance to the Constitution and the national symbols, and know what it means to be South African citizens.

We will ensure a common national approach to the changing of geographic and place names. This must provide an opportunity to involve all South Africans in forging an inclusive national identity, to deepen our understanding of our history and heritage.

Sport is a powerful nation-building tool. Working together we must support all our national teams from Bafana Bafana to the Proteas and the Springboks; from Banyana Banyana to Paralympians.

Our teams can only do well with our support.

Allow me to use this opportunity to congratulate our national teams for their performances in the past week, indeed in pulling off a hat trick.
The country’s women’s netball team has done us proud by winning the Tri-Nations Netball Challenge. Congratulations to the Sevens Springboks who have become the IRB Sevens World Series Champions - and not forgetting the Blue Bulls who have won the Super 14 finals in a convincing fashion!

We take this opportunity to wish the Springboks well in the upcoming series against the British and Irish Lions.

It is clear that we need to invest on a large scale in sports development. We will speed up the revival of school sport and ensure that it forms part of the school curriculum. In addition we will ensure that the provision of sport facilities in poorer communities receives priority.

Hon. Speaker and Chairperson,
We have committed ourselves over the years to contribute to building a better Africa and a better world.

The main goal of government for the medium term is to ensure that our foreign relations contribute to the creation of an environment conducive to sustainable economic growth and development.

To this effect, we will continue to prioritise the African continent by strengthening the African Union and its structures, and give special focus to the implementation of the New Partnership for Africa’s Development.

Equally important, and closer to home, is the strengthening of regional integration with particular emphasis on improving the political and economic integration of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) , towards the African Union (AU) goal of a Union government. We will establish a South African Development Partnership Agency to promote developmental partnerships with other countries on the continent.

South Africa will continue to assist in the reconstruction and development of the African continent especially in post-conflict situations. We will continue to encourage a peaceful and sustainable settlement to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict based on the two-state solution.

We will support the peace efforts of the African Union and the United Nations on the African continent, including in the Saharawi Arab Republic and Darfur in Sudan.

As the Chairperson of SADC and Facilitator, we will participate in promoting inclusive government until free and fair elections are held in Zimbabwe.

The plight of the Zimbabwean people has had a negative impact on the SADC region, especially South Africa. We call upon all peace-loving countries in the world to support the inclusive government to achieve economic recovery.

We will support efforts of the SADC region to resolve the situation in Madagascar.

Allow me, distinguished guests, to pay tribute to the SA National Defence Force for their sterling role in peace building in the continent.

Through continental and regional bodies, we will work towards the entrenchment of democracy and the respect for human rights on the African continent.

We will contribute to the strengthening of South-South relations and pursue mutually beneficial agreements with key countries of the South.

We will continue to enhance relations with the developed North including the G8, and our strategic partnership with the European Union.

We will continue to play an active role in ensuring the conclusion of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) Doha Development round of negotiations.

Honourable Speaker and Chairperson,
South Africa, being a dry country requires urgent action to mitigate adverse environmental changes and to ensure the provision of water to citizens.

Amongst various programmes, we will implement the Water for Growth and Development strategy, which will strengthen water management. We will continue to improve our energy efficiency and reliance on renewable energy.

Honourable Members,
A developmental state requires the improvement of public services and strengthening of democratic institutions.

We have established two Ministries in the Presidency to strengthen both strategic planning as well as performance monitoring and evaluation.

To ensure delivery on our commitments, we will hold Cabinet Ministers accountable through performance instruments, using established targets and output measures, starting in July.

We will also involve State-Owned Enterprises and Development Finance Institutions in the government planning processes and improve the monitoring and evaluation of their performance.

Honourable Members, fellow South Africans,

To ensure that all three spheres - local, provincial and national - improve service delivery, we will speed up the establishment of a single Public Service.

This administration will insist on putting people first in service delivery. We will ensure courteous and efficient service from front-counter staff in the provision of services in all government departments.

In this era of renewal, we will move towards a more interactive government.

To lead by example, work has begun on the establishment of a public liaison capacity in the Presidency.

In addition to receiving letters and e-mails from the public, we will also establish a hotline for easier access.

Staff will handle each public inquiry as if it was the only one, following it through all the channels until it receives the attention it deserves.

Honourable Speaker and Chairperson,

The National Youth Development Agency, formed through the merger of Umsobomvu Youth Fund and the National Youth Commission will be launched on June 16 in Ekurhuleni.

The institutions are being merged to enhance service and development opportunities provided to the youth.

The Agency will link up unemployed young graduates with economic opportunities; strengthen efforts to expand the National Youth Service Programme and support young entrepreneurs.

Speaker and Chairperson, Distinguished Guests,

Next month our beloved Madiba will turn 91. People all over the world still continue to clamour for his presence and for him to address their crises.
His values and his example of dedication to the service of humanity is a shining example in today’s troubled world.

An international campaign has been initiated by the Nelson Mandela Foundation and related organisations, called Mandela Day, which sums up what Tata stands for.

Mandela Day will be celebrated on the 18th of July each year. It will give people in South Africa and all over the world the opportunity to do something good to help others.

Madiba was politically active for 67 years, and on Mandela Day people all over the world, in the workplace, at home and in schools, will be called upon to spend at least 67 minutes of their time doing something useful within their communities, especially among the less fortunate.

Let us wholeheartedly support Mandela Day and encourage the world to join us in this wonderful campaign.

Honourable Speaker and Chairperson Fellow South Africans,

We have presented to the nation our programme for the next five years. Attached to each commitment we make is a detailed project plan, with targets and critical milestones.

This information will in due course be made public. Indeed as citizens we should at the same time ask ourselves what is it that we can do on our own to help promote this national programme.

To be a citizen is not only about rights, it is also about responsibility, to make a contribution to make ours a better country.

We also expect to work well with opposition parties in Parliament, in the spirit of putting the country first.

In addition, Madiba taught us well that this country belongs to all, black and white. Working for reconciliation and unity will remain important as we move forward.

Since the implementation of our programme will take place in the face of the economic downturn, we will have to act prudently - no wastage, no rollovers of funds - every cent must be spent wisely and fruitfully. We must cut our cloth according to our size.

Fellow South Africans, working together we can do more to realise our common vision of a better and more prosperous nation!

This is the partnership we are calling for.

I thank you!

Issued by: The Presidency
3 June 2009

Thanks to Kate Hunter at the GSB Library, Waterfront.

Party Policy In Modern Democracies

Policy Political parties Trackbacks (0)
Party policy in modern democracies
This website provides free access to the materials relating to the book Party Policy in Modern Democracies edited by Kenneth Benoit and Michael Laver which was published by Routledge in 2006. ISBN 978-0-415-36832-2. The 306 page text critically analyses party policy in 47 modern democracies. Section 2 offers discussion of how to measure and compare policy positions of political parties. Section 3 contains detailed data on party competition and policy positions in the 47 nations. It includes tables and graphs comparing policy positions of left-right and between nations of Western Europe and the former communist Eastern Europe. It also considers isues relating to EU integration and party policy positions. The website contains the full text of the author draft of the book, as well as a collection of associated data sets which may be downloaded. Copyright information is displayed on the website. From Intute.ac.uk
http://www.tcd.ie/Political_Science/ppmd/

Poverty And Public Policy... A Quarterly Academic Open Access Journal

Poverty Policy Social welfare Trackbacks (0)
Poverty and public policy: a global journal of social security, income, aid and welfare
Poverty and public policy
is a quarterly academic open access journal launched in 2009 with the support of the Policy Studies Organisation. ISSN 1944-2858. It aims to publish research articles, public policy reviews, book reviews, datasets and features covering a wide range of subjects relating to poverty, income distribution, and welfare (social security programmes) worldwide. These include social security benefits, social exclusion, welfare state policies and programmes) Users may access all materials from vol.1, 2009 via the website. It is also possible to sign up for RSS feeds to receive updates on the latest content added. From Intute.ac.uk
http://www.bepress.com/pso_poverty/

South Africa’S Policy Towards Zimbabwe... A GSB Research Talk

Policy International relations South Africa Zimbabwe Trackbacks (0)

South Africa’s policy towards Zimbabwe: A nexus between foreign policy and commercial interests?

SPEAKER: Mills Soko

Date:    Wednesday, February 11, 2009
Time:    12:45
Venue:  Board Room 1

ENTRANCE FREE

Please RSVP for seating purposes.

RSVP:    Contact:Cathy Taffinder
Tel: (021) 406-1473
Email: cathytaf@gsb.uct.ac.za
 
TOPIC ABSTRACT

This paper examines the extent to which South Africa’s policy towards Zimbabwe under the Mbeki administration was shaped by economic and commercial considerations. Given the extensive involvement and growing influence of the South African business sector in Zimbabwe, the potential link between the South African government’s policy stance towards Zimbabwe and South Africa’s commercial interests in Zimbabwe is intuitively appealing. The paper argues, however, that although South African firms have exploited the commercial opportunities that have emerged from the political and economic crises in Zimbabwe, it is not clear from the available evidence that commercial interests have been a primary consideration in South Africa’s policy towards Zimbabwe.  It concludes that the Mbeki government’s policy of ‘quiet diplomacy’ towards Zimbabwe was not principally shaped by economic objectives, but was instead driven predominantly by political and ideological concerns, which related closely to perceptions about South Africa’s role on the African continent.

Thanks to Lara Skelly for this information.

Brookings Institution: World. Link Working. CW.11.02.09

Policy International relations Trackbacks (0)

The Brookings Institution has a number of centers that specialize in urban policy, the economy, and foreign policy. Their "World" site brings together research, commentary, policy reports, and working papers that deal with a broad set of issues with a global reach. First-time users can browse around some of the "Recent Research and Commentary" area, and they may also wish to sign up for a Brookings account. With this account they can create their own online portfolio that will allow them to receive email updates about different topics and programs. The page also features a "Top Topics" area that brings together papers and op-ed pieces on subjects such as Afghanistan, terrorism, energy security, and Arab-Israeli relations. Additionally, visitors can sign up to receive their RSS feed and their newsletter. [KMG] From The Scout Report

http://www.brookings.edu/World.aspx

Language Planning

Policy Language Trackbacks (0)

Current issues in language planning
The academic journal 'Current Issues in Language Planning' has been published in print and online versions since the first issue in 2000. This website makes available PDF-format free downloads of full-text versions of articles from the 2000 to 2004 issues, but a subscription (institutional or individual) is required to access issues from 2005 onwards. The journal covers many aspects of language planning and policy related to two broad themes: polities and language planning (dealing with specific countries or regions); and issues in language planning (for example: information technology; language education; colonialism; minority language rights; literacy; language maintenance; national security and geopolitics; and terminology). From: Intute.ac.uk
http://www.multilingual-matters.net/cilp/default.htm

ESRC Centre For Climate Change Economics And Policy

Climate Change Policy Economic conditions and policy Trackbacks (0)
ESRC Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy
The ESRC Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy is a research centre collaboration between the London School of Economics and the University of Leeds. Starting in early 2009, the Centre's mission is "to advance public and private action on climate change through rigorous, innovative research". The Centre has five research themes: developing climate science and economics, climate-change governance for a new global deal, adaptation to climate change and human development, governments, markets and climate-change mitigation and the Munich Re Programme: Evaluating the economics of climate risks and opportunities in the insurance sector. Users can find out more about their work from the website, including brief details on the membership, governance and funding of the Centre. From: Intute.ac.uk
http://www.cccep.ac.uk/

Middle East Forum, US Think Tank... On Foreign Policy Towards Midddle East

Policy Middle East United States of America International relations Trackbacks (0)
Middle East Forum
The Middle East Forum is a US based think tank which seeks to promote a stronger American policy in the Middle East. Its stated aims include 'working for Palestinian acceptance of Israel and fighting Islamic extremism in the Middle East'. The website includes information on the aims, membership and recent activities of the group. It includes free access to press releases, blog postings from its members and full text articles from the Middle East Quarterly. They include materials by Daniel Pipes. Topics covered include Arab-israeli conflict, Islam and politics, the Middle East Peace process, position of Israel, Jerusalem, West Bank Gaza strip, and American foreign policy in the Middle East. Intute.ac.uk
http://www.meforum.org/

War On Terror - From Afghanistan To Somalia. International Council On Security And Development

Terrorism & Counter-Terrorism Policy Afghanistan United States of America International relations Somalia Trackbacks (0)
Chronic Failures in the War on Terror - From Afghanistan to Somalia
The International Council on Security and Development (ICOS), formerly known as The Senlis Council is an international think tank known for its work in Afghanistan and other conflict zones. It is a project of the Network of European Foundations' Mercator Fund. This site provides free access to the full text of its report published in May 2008.ISBN0-9555008-4-2. The 81 page report compares and contrasts insurgencies in Afghanistan and Somalia. It then considers American foreign policy toards the regions and possible future trends. Intute.ac.uk
http://www.senliscouncil.net/modules/publications/chronic_failures_war_terror

Youthink, World Bank Web Site For Young People

Development Policy World Bank Youth Trackbacks (0)
Youthink
Youthink has been created by a group of young people at the World Bank in response to questions they were receiving about development issues and policies. It is aimed at a youth audience with specialist sections for younger children and teachers, but provides an introduction to some of the key issues in economic and social development and the role that the World Bank plays. The range of issues covered includes debt relief, the environment, trade, globalisation and urbanization. Each issues page includes an introductory briefing linking to further resources, including multimedia files, opportunities to take action and key facts. There are plenty of downloadable teaching resources usually in form of factsheets, but also including online games, photo galleries / slideshows and audio / video resources. The site also includes a glossary of basic development terms and is presented in a number of languages. Intute.ac.uk
http://youthink.worldbank.org/

China Policy Institute

China Policy Trackbacks (0)
China Policy Institute
China Policy Institute is an academic research think tank based at the University of Nottingham. Its purpose is to study the role of China in the contemporary world, its relations with Western nations and the challenges faced by its rapid economic development. The website provides information about the aims of the centre and its current work. It includes free access to a growing collection of online publications from approximately 2005 onwards. These include: China Analysis (timely comment on Chinese politics, economic and social affairs), policy papers and discussion papers. Topics covered include Chinese politics, change and reform within the Chinese communist party and government, economic and trade developments, international relations and security and issues arising from the Beijing 2008 Olympic games. Intute.ac.uk
http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/cpi/about/index.php

Social Disadvantage Research Centre (SDRC), University Of Oxford

Poverty Policy Trackbacks (0)
Social Disadvantage Research Centre
The Social Disadvantage Research Centre (SDRC) is "an inter-disciplinary social research group carrying out policy related research within the Department of Social Policy and Social Work at the University of Oxford". The Centre's focus is on the concept and measurement of poverty particularly in small areas and over time. The centre's work includes the compilation of the UK's Index of Deprivation. This site contains details of the centre's research, working papers and publications, members, and a page of further links. Intute.ac.uk
http://www.spsw.ox.ac.uk/fileadmin/static/sdrc/

Isandla Institute: Vacancy For Policy Researcher

Policy Trackbacks (0)

Isandla Institute, a dynamic organisation based in Cape Town, promotes integrated, equitable and sustainable urban development. We engage in cutting edge research, knowledge sharing, development of alternative frameworks and methodologies, and advocacy to support urban development and transformation. We seek to fill the following position:

Policy Researcher

Main tasks and responsibilities:

  • Conceptualise, coordinate and conduct research on local government, land and spatial planning
  • Design and implement advocacy work to influence policy and planning at local, provincial and national level
  • Organise, coordinate and facilitate public events (e.g. roundtable discussions, seminars)
  • Write relevant publications and articles
  • Presentations at seminars, conferences, etc.
  • Establish and maintain relationships with key stakeholders (local, provincial, national)

We are looking for a dynamic person with experience and strong skills in project management, research and facilitation. The person we are looking for will be able to think strategically, conduct relatively high level interactions with government and civil society, and package information for different purposes and different audiences. Knowledge of ublic policy and policy development is essential. An understanding of issues related to ocal government, land and/or spatial planning will be most valuable.


The successful candidate is likely to have a post-graduate degree in Geography, Planning Law, Development Studies or Social Sciences. To be considered for this position, you need to be a South African citizen or hold permanent residence.

Salary is competitive and commensurate with experience. Opportunities for flexible working
arrangements are negotiable.

All applications must include a letter indicating how you qualify for the position, current salary details, a detailed curriculum vitae which includes a list of publications, and three contactable references. Applications should be sent to admin@isandla.org.za by Friday 22 August 2008.


Isandla Institute is committed to equity in its employment practices. It is our intention to appoint individuals with the aim of meeting our equity objectives.

Centre For Development Policy And Research (CDPR). SOAS.

Development Policy Economic conditions and policy Trackbacks (0)
Centre for Development Policy and Research (CDPR)
The Centre for Development Policy and Research (CDPR) is a research centre at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), a college of the University of London. It conducts policy-oriented research and training on development issues such as the areas of globalization, international political economy, economic policy alternatives, conflict and development, food security and agrarian change, labour markets and employment, and governance and institutional change. Their website includes details about the staff, publications, events and news from the Centre. Publications include development viewpoints (1 pages summaries of policy issues), reports for external bodies and discussion papers of academic research - usually available as PDF files. Intute.ac.uk
http://www.soas.ac.uk/cdpr/

PolicyArchive

Policy Trackbacks (0)

PolicyArchive

PolicyArchive is a joint project of The Center for Governmental Studies (CGS) and Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis Library. It provides free access to an online archive / repository of public policy research outputs from over 200 (mainly US) think tank, university, government, and foundation-funded policy research centers. This includes articles, eprints, reports, working papers, documents, webcasts and other multimedia. Most items are offered in full text and date from 2007/8 onwards.. Topics covered are very wide ranging, including coverage of business, health policy, economic policy, American politics; government, social policy, educational policy, demographics, industry, military and defence and media and communications. The main emphasis is upon issues relating to the United States and North America. Users may sign up to receive newsletters. Intute.ac.uk
https://www.policyarchive.org/

World Population Policies 2007

Policy Afghanistan Population Trackbacks (0)

The World Population Policies 2007 provides a summary overview of population policies and dynamics for each of the United Nations Member and non-member States for which data are available at mid-decade for the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s and for 2007. It shows, on a country-by-country basis, the evolution of Government views and policies from 1976 to 2007 with respect to population size and growth, population age structure, fertility and family planning, health and mortality, spatial distribution and international migration. Learn how you can purchase, download and/or purchase the CD-ROM from the website.  UN Pulse
Permanent Link: World Population Policies 2007

Rising Food Prices: Policy Options And World Bank Response (Word; 175 KB)

Policy World Bank Food, food supply and food security Trackbacks (0)

Rising food prices: Policy options and World Bank response (Word; 175 KB)
Source: World Bank

The rising trend in international food prices continued, and even accelerated, in 2008. U.S. wheat export prices rose from $375/ton in January to $440/ton in March, and Thai rice export prices increased from $365/ton to $562/ton. This came on top of a 181 percent increase in global wheat prices over the 36 months leading up to February 2008, and a 83 percent increase in overall global food prices over the same period.

Increased bio-fuel production has contributed to the rise in food prices. Concerns over oil prices, energy security and climate change have prompted governments to take a more proactive stance towards encouraging production and use of bio-fuels. This has led to increased demand for bio-fuel raw materials, such as wheat, soy, maize and palm oil, and increased competition for cropland. Almost all of the increase in global maize production from 2004 to 2007 (the period when grain prices rose sharply) went for bio-fuels production in the U.S., while existing stocks were depleted by an increase in global consumption for other uses. Other developments, such as droughts in Australia and poor crops in the E.U. and Ukraine in 2006 and 2007, were largely offset by good crops and increased exports in other countries and would not, on their own, have had a significant impact on prices. Only a relatively small share of the increase in food production prices (around 15%) is due directly to higher energy and fertilizer costs.

The observed increase in food prices is not a temporary phenomenon, but likely to persist in the medium term. Food crop prices are expected to remain high in 2008 and 2009 and then begin to decline as supply and demand respond to high prices; however, they are likely to remain well above the 2004 levels through 2015 for most food crops. Forecasts of other major organizations (FAO, OECD, and USDA) that regularly monitor and project commodity prices are broadly consistent with these projections. Predictions of high food price in the medium run are further strengthened when we factor in the impact of policies aimed at achieving energy security and reduced carbon dioxide emissions, which may present strong trade-offs with food security objectives.

Docuticker

LDC Priorities For UNCTAD XII: Export Competitiveness And Development In LDCs

Development Policy UNCTAD Least Developed Countries Exports Trackbacks (0)
The UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) has issued a new publication to assist least developed countries (LDCs) during the preparatory process for UNCTAD XII, Export competitiveness and development in LDCs: policies, issues and priorities for least developed countries for action during and beyond UNCTAD XII (full text, pdf, 704 KB). According to the highlights, the report agues that there is considerable scope for many LDCs to join the group of successful exporters, particularly in the field of traditional exports such as oil, copper, coffee, cocoa and groundnuts.

UNCTAD XII will be held in Accra, Ghana, 20-25 April 2008. Documents for participants, as well as reference documents (major declarations) and UNCTAD's flagship publications are available on the website. UN Pulse   Permanent Link: LDC priorities for UNCTAD XII

Africa Policy Journal

Africa Policy Journals Trackbacks (0)

Africa Policy Journal
The Africa Policy Journal is a free open access electronic journal which is published by John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. It contains scholarly articles, research, comment , interviews and book and film reviews about issues relating to social, economic and political policy in Africa and individual African nations. Key topics include issues facing economic, social and political development in health policy and HIV; foreign policy, international security and governance. All issues from 2006 onwards may be downloaded. Intute.ac.uk
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/kssgorg/apj/

Education Policy In Developing Countries And Cost-Benefit Analysis

Policy Education World Bank Trackbacks (0)

Can cost-benefit analysis guide education policy in developing countries?
Source: World Bank Policy Research Working Papers

Cost-benefit analysis in education is an important tool in the economists’ arsenal. However, it is essential that research, especially on the social benefits of education, make further progress to make cost-benefit more analysis. There is a need for more research on the effects of policy interventions on outcomes beyond access to a year in school and what they earn as a result, such as on what children actually learn. Such research should focus on ensuring that the interventions are attributable to outcomes. Nevertheless, it is worthwhile to go through the discipline of noting the benefits and costs, even if social rates of return cannot be calculated robustly.

+ Full Paper (PDF; 172 KB)

Docuticker

Ethics In The Curricula Of Schools Of Public Management And Policy

Policy Ethics Teaching Public Administration Trackbacks (0)

What Makes Ethics Practical
Source: Harvard University, Kennedy School of Government, Faculty Research Working Papers Series

The place of ethics in the curriculum of schools of public management and policy is not a settled matter. One common approach, called applied ethics, relies primarily on the work of academic philosophers and follows a two-stage process: first, work out the guiding principles (in the academy, where one is protected from worldly pressures), then apply them to the real world (where they are inevitably compromised). This essay defends an alternative approach, practical ethics, which follows John Dewey’s admonition to be guided by problems of life and practice, rather than academic disputes or disciplinary methods. The essay identifies the basic features of practical ethics, and proposes an agenda for future research. It emphasizes, above all, that practical ethics is strategic and depends crucially on the ability to exercise contingent judgment. Practical ethics takes into account the powers, opportunities, and constraints, as well as the interests (including moral interests), of human agents in particular circumstances. The picture of practical reasoning is thus at odds with the prevailing approach. The essay also addresses the peculiar position of the classroom teacher of ethics, who is not confronted by ineluctable features of real decision making, including the necessity to act and the contingencies involved in acting both effectively and well. Suggestions are offered on how the teaching of practical ethics can be improved.

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Institute For Public Policy Research : Security In A Changing World

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New front line: Security in a changing world This site provides free access to a full text paper by Ian Kearns and Ken Gude which was published as IPPR Commission on National Security, Working Paper No. 1 by the Institute for Public Policy Research in February 2008. The 42 page paper discusses the causes and nature of change in the national and international security environment. Topics covered include: the impact of globalisation; climate change; the growth of political and fundamental Islam and socio-economic vulnerability. Intute.ac.uk
http://www.ippr.org/publicationsandreports/publication.asp?id=588

Pakistan

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Bad News Makes Headlines: Security challenges posed by Pakistan
Source: Institute for Public Policy Research

Pakistan does not often make international headlines, but on the occasions in which it does it is portrayed extremely negatively and as a failing state. Variously, Pakistan is blamed in the press for harbouring al-Qaeda terrorists, tensions with India, the training of fighters in Afghanistan, and for exporting nuclear technology. Although often grounded in fact, most reports are written in unnecessarily alarmist fashion, as demonstrated in the aftermath of terrorist attacks.

Pakistan is too important, especially in the wake of the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, for alarmist views of the situation to distort a more sober understanding of the dynamics of the country’s politics and their implications for Western policy. This background briefing paper attempts to redress the balance.

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Amitai Etzioni Notes

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Amitai Etzioni notes

Amitai Etzioni is Director of the Institute for Communitarian Policy Studies at George Washington University. His distinguished career includes a period as president of the American Sociological Association, and he founded the Communitarian Network. His recent publications are The Common Good, From Empire to Community: A New Approach to International Relations, and How Patriotic is the Patriot Act: Freedom Versus Security in the Age of Terrorism. In this weblog he writes on international affairs, foreign policy, markets, religion, media and security issues. From Intute.ac.uk
http://blog.amitaietzioni.org/

Leading Public Policy Research Organizations In The World, 2007

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The Global “Go-To Think Tanks”: The Leading Public Policy Research Organizations in the World, 2007 (PDF; 265 KB)
Source: Foreign Policy Research Institute

Gone are the days when a think tank could operate with the motto “research it, write it and they will find it”. Today, think tanks must be lean, mean, policy machines. The report that follows summarizes the findings of a pilot project to identify some of the leading think tanks in the world, and provides lists of what might be called the “go to think tanks” in every region.

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Foreign Policy And National Security Implications Of Global Climate Change

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The Age of Consequences: The Foreign Policy and National Security Implications of Global Climate Change
Source: Center for Strategic & International Studies

In August 2007, a Russian adventurer descended 4,300 meters under the thinning ice of the North Pole to plant a titanium flag, claiming some 1.2 million square kilometers of the Arctic for mother Russia. Not to be outdone, the Prime Minister of Canada stated his intention to boost his nation’s military presence in the Arctic, with the stakes raised by the recent discovery that the icy Northwest Passage has become navigable for the first time in recorded history. Across the globe, the spreading desertification in the Darfur region has been compounding the tensions between nomadic herders and agrarian farmers, providing the environmental backdrop for genocide. In Bangladesh, one of the most densely populated countries in the world, the risk of coastal flooding is growing and could leave some 30 million people searching for higher ground in a nation already plagued by political violence and a growing trend toward Islamist extremism. Neighboring India is already building a wall along its border with Bangladesh. More hopefully, the award of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize to Vice President Al Gore and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is a clear recognition that global warming poses not only environmental hazards but profound risks to planetary peace and stability as well.

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Nicolas Sarkozy

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Nicolas Sarkozy: The Hyperpresident
Source: The Brookings Institution

Sarkozy’s honeymoon, of course, will not last forever. The vested interests who oppose change will resist and try to sabotage his reforms, the government will inevitably make mistakes, and, eventually, the opposition will find its feet (and new leaders). Most important, if recent signs that the French economy is slowing bear out, the government’s popularity—and its abilityto implement its promised reforms—will take a severe hit, as unemployment and budget deficits mount. Even so, it is hard to avoid the conclusion that something significant has happened in France. The French have elected a leader who has promised to break with thirty years of welfare-state stasis at home and conventional risk-averse diplomacy abroad, and whose energy, dynamism and ambition have not been seen since the foundation of the Fifth Republic in 1 958. Sarkozy’s success in reforming France over the next five years is far from guaranteed. More certain is that this determined hyperprésident is going to try, and that France will never be the same again.

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Renewable Energy Sources

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A new report of the Secretary-General on the Promotion of new and renewable sources of energy has been issued (A/62/208). Although the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation, adopted by the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development calls for increasing the global share of energy obtained from renewable sources, this share remains considerably below its economic potential. The report examines policy options for the promotion of new and renewable sources of energy reviewed by the Commission on Sustainable Development.


UN Pulse Permanent Link: Energy sources

U.S. Policy Documents - Iraq

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Iraq - U.S. Policy Documents

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N2 Gateway Pilot Project [Development Dialogue]

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The N2 Gateway Pilot Project: Fiasco or model for the future South African city?

Isandla Institute and the Open Society Foundation for South Africa invite you to a Development Dialogue on Thursday 19 July 2007 from 16h30-18h00 at the Centre for the Book, 62 Queen Victoria Street, Cape Town. Kindly note: the event will start at 16h30. Tea and coffee are made available between 16h00-16h30.

Speakers: Xhanti Sigcawu (Thubelisha Homes)

Luthando Ndabambi (N2 Gateway Residents Association)

Prof Mark Swilling (University of Stellenbosch)

Please RSVP on HYPERLINK below by Tuesday 17 July: (You will receive confirmation of your attendance.)

http://webmail.mweb.net/src/compose.php?send_to=admin%40isandla.org.za"admin@isandla.org.za

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Centre For Analysis Of South African Social Policy

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Website of the Centre for the Analysis of South African Social Policy (CASASP) in the Department of Social Policy and Social Work (DSPSW) at the University of Oxford. CASASP aims "to assist in the eradication of poverty and building of citizenship in South Africa through high quality evidence-based social policy research and training with an international comparative dimension." The website gives access to full text pdf reports including South Africa Microdata Scoping Study and Provincial Indices of Multiple Deprivation for South Africa. Also listed are the Centre's partner organisations in Africa and worldwide.
http://www.casasp.ox.ac.uk/

From Intute.ac.uk

More From The Centre Of Policy Studies

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Civil-State Society Relations in South Africa Some Lessons from Engagement. Kirty Ranchod

Policy Issues and Actors, Vol 20 no 7, February 2007

http://www.cps.org.za/cps%20pdf/pia20_7.pdf

IBSA Regional Security Dimenstions: The South African Perspective. Mills Soko

Policy Issues and Actors, Vol 20 no 6, April 2007

http://www.cps.org.za/cps%20pdf/pia20_6.pdf

Public Service Performance: Towards a better life for all.
Aubrey Matshiqi

Policy Issues and Actors, Vol 20 no 5, February 2007

http://www.cps.org.za/cps%20pdf/pia20_5.pdf

Affirmative Action and State Capacity in a Democratic South Africa. Omano Edigheji

Policy Issues and Actors, Vol 20 no 4, February 2007

http://www.cps.org.za/cps%20pdf/pia20_4.pdf

Public Service Delivery in a Democratic, Developmental State. Ebrahim Fakir

Policy Issues and Actors, Vol 20 no 3, February 2007

http://www.cps.org.za/cps%20pdf/pia20_3.pdf

Traditional and Non-Traditional threats in a changing global order: An Indian Perspective. Ruchita Beri

Policy Issues and Actors, Vol 20 no 2, February 2007

http://www.cps.org.za/cps%20pdf/pia20_2.pdf

Reflections On The ANC's Policy Conference

Africa Development Policy ANC South Africa Trackbacks (0)
Rethinking South Africa's Development Path: Reflections on the ANC's Policy Conference Discussion Documents
Edited by Dr. Omano Edigheji
Special edition of Policy: Issues and Actors, Vol 20 no 10, June 2007

James A. Baker III Institute For Public Policy

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Baker Institute... is a leading US public policy think tank based at Rice University. Research focuses on a wide range of issues relating to US domestic and foreign policy with the goal of bridging the gap between the theory and practice of public policy. The website provides free access to information about the aims of the institute and its activities. The website hosts a wealth of full text papers, reports and webcasts. Topics covered range from international economics; international relations; public diplomacy; globalisation and international drugs policy. From Intute.ac.uk

http://www.bakerinstitute.org/

Two Web Sites: ASE & ECSA - SA

Africa Policy Economic conditions and policy Trackbacks (0)
Association for Social Economics

European Communities Study Association in Southern Africa

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Isandla Institute

Development Policy Cities Aids and HIV Trackbacks (0)

Isandla Institute is a public interest development think-tank with a primary focus on fostering just, equitable and democratic urban settlements.

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Policy Review [Journal]

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Hoover Institution: Policy Review [pdf]

http://www.hoover.org/publications/policyreview/

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