Education Beyond Apartheid

Education Beyond Apartheid
Author: Study Project on Christianity in Apartheid Society. Education Commission
Publisher:
Total Pages: 89
Release: 1971
Genre: Apartheid
ISBN:

Education Beyond Apartheid

Education Beyond Apartheid
Author: Study Project on Christianity in Apartheid Society. Education Commission
Publisher:
Total Pages: 122
Release: 1971
Genre: Apartheid
ISBN:

In this report the Commission has interpreted education in three distinct but inter-related ways. The first concerns the process of becoming educated, and involves such concepts as personal growth and the development of individual capacities, attainments and moral social attitudes. The second concerns the society's needs for socializing the child and preparing him to fit as an adult into the society's pattern. The third concerns the institutions, both State and private, which are organized to meet the two previous interpretaions of the process of education.

Education Beyond Apartheid

Education Beyond Apartheid
Author: Study Project on Christianity in Apartheid Society. Education Commission
Publisher:
Total Pages: 82
Release: 1971
Genre: Apartheid
ISBN:

Beyond the Apartheid Workplace

Beyond the Apartheid Workplace
Author: Eddie Webster
Publisher: University of Kwazulu Natal Press
Total Pages: 524
Release: 2005
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

Has the apartheid workplace changed over the past ten years of democracy in South Africa? In order to answer this question, the contributors of this book studied seventeen different workplaces, including BMW, a state hospital, footwear sweatshops and the wine farming industry. The editors broaden the definition of work to cover studies of the informal economy, including street traders, homeworkers and small rural enterprises. Beyond the Apartheid Workplace shows how South Africa's triple transition-towards political democracy, economic liberalization and post-colonial transformation-has generated contradictory pressures at workplace levels. A wide range of managerial strategies and union responses are identified, demonstrating both continuities and discontinuities with past practices. These studies reveal a growing differentiation within the world of work between stable, formal-sector work, casualized and outsourced work, and informal work where people struggle to make a living on the margins of the formal economy. The majority of workplaces are marked by the persistence and reconfiguration of the apartheid legacy. Deepening poverty and exclusion have been generated among great numbers of workers and their dependents.