4. Electronic Theses and Dissertations (ETDs) - Faculties submissions
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Item The Persistent Health Burden: Understanding Black South African Working-Class Men’s Experiences of Living with Tuberculosis(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2024) Madhuha, Edmond; Carrasco, Lorena NunezThis study is the culmination of ethnographic fieldwork on black working-class men’s tuberculosis (TB) illness experiences, conducted during 2020 and 2021 in Modimolle Township, a non-mining, peri-urban community of South Africa’s Limpopo province. The study examines ways men construct masculine identities and how this provides a lens through which to understand their health-seeking behaviours when beset with TB suggestive symptoms. Men’s construction of masculine identities further helps shed light on their tuberculosis illness experiences and treatment outcomes. Tuberculosis scholarship in South Africa has justifiably focused on the impact of silicosis on men, and the subsequent oscillating labour migration as pathways through which the disease is contracted and transmitted to non-mining communities of the country and the southern African region. Men’s experiences with tuberculosis disease in non-mining communities have however received little attention in South Africa’s extensive tuberculosis research. Drawing from the African-centred theories of masculinity is a conceptualisation of men that I call masculinity in sociability. This thesis of masculinity in sociability manifests when men gather in spaces and engage in social behaviours and practices such as sharing cigarettes and beer within proximity of each other. I demonstrate that masculinity in sociability is informed by the socio-cultural values of seriti (dignity, integrity, and respect), maitshwaro (manners and conduct), and botho (humanness, ubuntu, the sum of human values), which engender a sense of belonging and community among men in specific masculinised spaces. I argue that masculinity in sociability illuminates the crucial and intricate interplay between masculinised, enclosed physical spaces and shared air as possible ways tuberculosis is contracted and transmitted among men. Considering that masculinity in practices of sociability is predominantly performed in masculinised spaces, I further argue that its manifestation concomitantly recedes when men experience TB illness in the private sphere of the home. The thesis demonstrates that men’s exposure, infection, diagnosis, and response to tuberculosis treatment are influenced by their masculinity. In contrast to the public performances of masculinity for the purposes of sociability, the vulnerabilities brought about by tuberculosis create a significant disruption in individuals’ life stories. This disruption is evident in men’s experiences of losing their sources of income and becoming dependent on the care provided by mothers and spouses, which can be experienced by men as a return to a more childlike state. From health through to the continuum of TB diagnosis and illness experience, the thesis shows that masculinity exhibits a remarkable flexibility and adaptability. The thesis contributes to our understanding of masculinities by offering a condensed perspective on how iv economically marginalised black men perceive and undergo the challenges of tuberculosis. Using metaphors, men depict TB as a debilitating and insidious illness condition which unmasks their vulnerability.Item So, for the Record Behind the headlines in an era of state capture(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2021) Harber, Anton; Olivier, G .Item The Decriminalisation of Sex Work as a Human Rights Issue in South Africa(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2023) Khumalo, ThandoluhleThis research report argues that sex work be decriminalised in South Africa to avoid further human rights violations against sex workers, with a particular focus on the human rights violations perpetuated against sex workers during the COVID19 pandemic. To make these arguments the report sets out the background of sex work and the origins of the various laws that have emerged over the years to regulate sex work in South Africa. Further, it investigates how sex work is governed in various countries around the world and uses New Zealand and other African countries as examples of the different approaches to legislating sex work. The report focuses on the effect of the COVID19 pandemic on female sex workers who make up the majority of sex workers. This research report grounds its assertions in the various human rights considerations found in international legal instruments as well as the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (Constitution) as they relate to sex work. The conclusion is that sex work should be decriminalised in South Africa as the current laws that seek to prohibit sex work in South Africa are both unconstitutional and not compliant with international human rights standardsItem An investigation into paywalls in the south african online news space(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2024) Crossley, Gaye Tracey; Daniels, GlendaJournalism should aspire to be a public good, meaning people should ideally have un-excluded and un-rivalrous access to the news. For news to be a public good, it must serve to educate and inform readers and be free from economic and political interference. However, journalism cannot be a public good if it is not financially viable. One way South African news organisations have sought to create financial viability and sustainability is through the implementation of paywalls. However, subscription services like paywalls pose a risk to journalism being a public good. South Africa’s unequal society, along with the digital divide, are major inhibitors to people being able to access news online. Paywalls further exacerbate this issue of access. This research aims to investigate paywalls in the South African online news space, within the context of journalism serving as a public good. In doing so, the research considered the digital divide, digital disruption of the newsroom, sustainability of the newsroom, and the positive and negative contributions of paywalls to South African online news. This qualitative research was conducted through a series of structured interviews with two of South Africa’s media houses, Media24 and Arena Holdings, which had both implemented paywalls for their online news sites. These case studies were then juxtaposed against Daily Maverick, which has kept its news free for all readers, but relies on a number of alternative funding models, including a membership model.Item From Persons of Indian Origin to Overseas Citizen of India: The South African Indian diaspora and India’s economic diplomacy(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2024) Moosa, Fatima; Menon, Dilip MThe India diaspora is one of the largest in the world with around 17.9 million people from India and/or of Indian descent living around the world (Challagalla 2018, 3). A large percentage of the diaspora is situated in the Global North and the Middle East. However, South Africa has been noted as having one of the largest Indian diasporic populations (Hofmeyer and Williams 2001,14). The migration of Indian people to South Africa has taken place over different periods. The relationship that exists between the diaspora and the country of origin in the spheres of economic and development diplomacy presents an interesting research topic. This dissertation will seek to understand what role, if any, the South African Indian diaspora plays in the international political economy of India. In order to understand the relationship between the diaspora and the Indian government, this dissertation will examine the bilateral relationship between South Africa and India from 1994 until 2022. There will be a specific focus on the years 2014 until 2022 with an analysis of the relationship between the South African Indian diaspora and India. This dissertation will seek to understand whether the diasporic policies and economic diplomacy enacted by the Modi government were directed at the South African Indian diaspora, how they were received by the South African Indian mercantile community and what were the reasons for the foreign policy.Item Exploring the Constructions of Masculinity of Unemployed Young Black Men from Mamelodi(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2024) Sibanyoni, Dineo Naomi-Beth; Graham, TanyaAlthough masculinity has been widely explored internationally and in local academic research, there are still gaps in understanding the constructions of masculinity with regards to young men’s experiences of unemployment in impoverished areas. This research explores constructions of masculinity among young unemployed black men living in the township of Mamelodi, in Gauteng. The particular focus is on understanding their perceptions of employment and the provider role within their conceptualisations of hegemonic masculinity. With this understanding, their ideas around how these constructions obstruct or enhance their psychosocial life experiences can be better understood. The research used qualitative research design to yield more rich and detailed data. Purposive and snowball sampling methods were utilised to recruit eight participants to share their experiences. The participants were young unemployed black men between the ages of 18 and 35 years of age, making up the criteria needed to make up the sample. The theoretical framework that the study uses to support and understand the phenomena was the social constructionist view of masculinity. The data collecting method was semi-structured interviews and thematic analysis was then used to analyse the data. The main themes identified in the analysis were Proactivity, Dreams and Hopes, Unemployment, Masculinity and Culture, and Obstacles and Persistence. The findings indicated that the experience of being a young unemployed black male has an impact on how these men see themselves in relation to the social expectations of men fulfilling the provider role in their environment. This was seen to also influence their psychosocial lives. Through the findings, an exploration of the resistance to show full expressions of emotions that occur with this particular group of people can also be observed.Item The impact of Covid-19 on international migration and remittances in developing countries(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2023-03-20) Zihindula, Awa; Okon, keminiabasi EyitaInternational migration from developing countries and remittances to those same countries have risen steadily over time due to various factors. Remittance is a source of income for most developing countries. Both sending and receiving countries benefit from migration. However, shocks such as natural crises, pandemics and epidemics (COVID-19 and Ebola) have devastated the economy worldwide, with a high unemployment rate and lower income. This research report aimed to study the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on migration and remittances in developing countries to establish the relationship between inflow remittances and migration outflow controlling for other factors (such as unemployment rate, internet access, economic growth and GDP growth). World Bank data and UNDESA data were used in the study. However, the developing countries were dichotomized as African and non_African countries for an in-depth analysis. The study employed multiple regression model to identify the associations between variables. Results of the study found that in African countries before and during COVID-19, there was no significant relationship between migration outflow and inflow of remittances. Furthermore, the control variables did not have an effect on the dependent variable. For non-African countries, the result shows that COVID-19 did significantly affect the relationship between inflow remittances and migration outflow; when migration outflow increases, there is a decrease in remittances inflow.Item Who do i think i am? Autoethnographic and zoomorphic comics and the expression of coloured identity.(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2024) Alexander, Ashleigh Jesse; RANDLE, LUWAROTIMI; REID, KIRSTENThis thesis presents my investigation into what I term my "Coloured Experience," my examination of zoomorphic imagery, and my approach to portraying this research through a comic book. This aims to produce an artifact that talks about being Coloured in a creative and personal way, which is a response to a significant gap in the portrayal of Coloured people, highlighting a tendency towards oversimplified, sensationalized, and politicised narratives. I employ autoethnographic reflection as my method of inquiry and use zoomorphism as a technique for representation, the outcome of which is a comic book. Zoomorphism in graphic narratives, works as a visually stimulating tool for representing the concept of race, by drawing on visual metaphor, animal association and allegory, in combination with the comics medium, and an engagement with guided autoethnographic journaling, this research produced a comic book where I was able to host a discussion on my experience as a Coloured person in a safe and creative way. This research does not extensively explore my origins, nor does it delve into the formation of Coloured people as a distinct racial group to establish a definitive common ancestor or construct a narrative to define the essence of being Coloured.Item The role of entrepreneurial coaching on the success of black women- owned SMEs(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2023) Kunene, Ntandoyenkosi; Msimango-Galawe, JabulileBackground: A clear definition of coaching in the context of entrepreneurship is still lacking. This kind of support is progressively becoming more popular to aid black women entrepreneurs succeed as first and second generation business owners. However, research on how well such a support measure generates revenue is currently being investigated. Aim: This research study is aimed at exploring the role of entrepreneurial coaching on the success of black women-owned SMEs. Setting: This research was carried out in South Africa with 15 black women entrepreneurs located in different parts of the country. Moreover, the study focused on registered SMEs. Method: To enable the exploration of personal experiences, a qualitative research approach was employed. Therefore, 15 in-depth interviews using semi-structured questions were used to collect the data and the thematic analysis was used as a tool of analysis. Findings: The study established that black women business owners in the SME sector are increasingly discovering the benefits of entrepreneurial coaching as a form of support. The study established a strong positive relationship between entrepreneurial competencies and entrepreneurial efficacy as key factors in coaching initiatives. The confusion of the terms mentoring and coaching is one that still exists where the concepts are used interchangeably. Lastly, black women face difficulties that can be divided into Four categories; namely, entrepreneurial competencies, entrepreneurial exposure, being the racial and gendered minority group, and how this group of women is put in a vulnerable position to perform sexual favours to advance businesses. Conclusion: The study deduces that the role of entrepreneurial efficacy is the foundation of building entrepreneurial competencies. The study will be helpful vii to entrepreneurial coaches and mentors, policymakers and organizations, black women who manage their own businesses, investors and funders, and the academic communityItem Media Voices and Power: A decolonial analysis of black voices in the post-apartheid South African media landscape using City Press newspaper as an analytical focus(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2023-03) Mgibisa, Mbuyisi; Menon, Dilip; Daniels, GlendaThis study conducts a decolonial analysis of black voices in the post-apartheid South African media landscape using City Press newspaper as an analytical focus. For the purposes of this study, I have analysed four case studies linked to the mediation and meditation of black voices in the media and public sphere. First, this study explores the subjection of black voices inside the newsroom using the black-oriented newspaper, City Press, as an example. It assesses the structure of whiteness in that newspaper and interrogate whether it provided its black journalists with a room to write from the standpoint of “black perspective”. The second theme is an exploration and personal account of my lived experience in the typical South African neoliberal newsroom and an attempt to bring theory in order to figure out my lived experience. Third, this thesis focuses on forms of gendered and racialised forms of subjection posed by the silencing of voices of black women journalists in the South African mainstream media, including social media. And the fourth theme looks at the importance and significance of voice or speech in doing politics in the post-apartheid South Africa and interrogates how the Economic Freedom Fighters’ (EFF) has deployed its “radical black voice” through the concept of Black rage. The study utilises decolonial theory and Steve Biko’s Black Consciousness philosophy as a lens as it seeks to investigate how essentialised, racialised, politicised, gendered and lived are black voices in post 1994 South Africa media landscape and public sphere. This study, then, involves the critical analysis of four themes, all of which are integrally related. The main argument advanced in this thesis is that black voices continue to be subjected through the concept and function of coloniality. For this reason, the study not only historizes black voices as producers, users and custodians of knowledge but also situates their lived experiences. This study finds that even in the face of debilitating coloniality in our everyday lives, black voices persist through those politicised, gendered, racialised and lived negative forms of invisibility and marginalisation and think and speak from the perspective of blackness. Therefore, this thesis posits that black voices are a communicative plane on which blackness performs and articulate itself, for itself. Moreover, this study is a form of epistemic protest against systematic and systemic silencing of black voices and an attempt to counter efforts of rendering black people, in particular black women, speechless. The transdisciplinary methodological approach deployed here is, first and foremost, embedded in the theoretical framework and various methods and concepts will be operationalised to bring to light the complex and complicated nature of how black voices are mediated in the post-apartheid South African media landscape and public sphere. The interview method, which comprises a reflective commentary, and autoethnography are important components of this study. Additionally, the empirical findings through interview material, newspaper articles and tweeter feeds have been examined through discourse analysis and through the prism of the conceptual analytical tools deployed here.