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Tackling poverty at its roots: a case study of skills development in integrated conservation and development with the example of the Working For Water programme

The South African government has been challenged to combat persistently high rates of structural unemployment and poverty among parts of the previously disadvantaged population since the country's political transition in the 1990s. One policy response is the introduction of the Expanded Public Works...

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Main Author: Rönchen, Ann-Kristina
Other Authors: Matose, Frank
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Sociology 2014
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access_status_str Open Access
author Rönchen, Ann-Kristina
author2 Matose, Frank
author_browse Matose, Frank
Rönchen, Ann-Kristina
author_facet Matose, Frank
Rönchen, Ann-Kristina
author_sort Rönchen, Ann-Kristina
collection Thesis
description The South African government has been challenged to combat persistently high rates of structural unemployment and poverty among parts of the previously disadvantaged population since the country's political transition in the 1990s. One policy response is the introduction of the Expanded Public Works Programme (EPWP), which seeks to alleviate poverty by providing labour-intensive work opportunities for the unemployed in the sectors of infrastructure, environment and culture, economics and in the social sector. In 2014 the second phase of the EPWP will come to a close. The environmental sector of the EPWP addresses issues of biodiversity conservation and natural resource management, and offers work opportunities in programmes such as the Working for Water (WfW) programme. South Africa is one of the most bio-diverse countries in the world and a pioneer in the control of invasive alien plants (IAPs). The WfW programme provides work opportunities and training for beneficiaries and contractors to control IAPs, using biological, mechanical and chemical methods. Skills development in the EPWP is regarded as a key factor to overcome unemployment and poverty on a long-term basis. Using the case study of the Citrusdal Water Users Association (CWUA), a project of the WfW programme, this thesis analyses to what extent and of what developmental value the environmental EPWP fulfills its objective of skills development. The training model of the WfW programme in the Western Cape, with special focus on the project CWUA, serves as analytical tool. Data was collected through qualitative interviews among WfW officials of the Western Cape Regional and the National Office, and supported by a questionnaire among 79 beneficiaries of the CWUA project using closed dichotomous questions. Furthermore, the research was informed through the review of internal WfW documents such as training matrix, training strategy and literacy assessment results of beneficiaries, as well as a questionnaire conducted by WfW officials and analysed by the researcher. The thesis has found that the training model currently in place deals only with the symptoms of poverty and that the relief is of temporary nature. Skills development ends at the programme boundaries and has little impact on the beneficiaries' enhancement of future employability. The model does not make full use of its potential to contribute to longterm reduction of unemployment. Reasons are found in the multi-objective context of nature conservation, job creation and skills development, which leads to the neglect of the latter. This research adds to the literature of Integrated Conservation and Development (ICD) on a governmental level and questions whether interventions such as the EPWP contribute to the socio-economic development of the South African population from a long-term perspective.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2014
publishDateRange 2014
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publisher Department of Sociology
publisherStr Department of Sociology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/6827 Tackling poverty at its roots: a case study of skills development in integrated conservation and development with the example of the Working For Water programme Rönchen, Ann-Kristina Matose, Frank The South African government has been challenged to combat persistently high rates of structural unemployment and poverty among parts of the previously disadvantaged population since the country's political transition in the 1990s. One policy response is the introduction of the Expanded Public Works Programme (EPWP), which seeks to alleviate poverty by providing labour-intensive work opportunities for the unemployed in the sectors of infrastructure, environment and culture, economics and in the social sector. In 2014 the second phase of the EPWP will come to a close. The environmental sector of the EPWP addresses issues of biodiversity conservation and natural resource management, and offers work opportunities in programmes such as the Working for Water (WfW) programme. South Africa is one of the most bio-diverse countries in the world and a pioneer in the control of invasive alien plants (IAPs). The WfW programme provides work opportunities and training for beneficiaries and contractors to control IAPs, using biological, mechanical and chemical methods. Skills development in the EPWP is regarded as a key factor to overcome unemployment and poverty on a long-term basis. Using the case study of the Citrusdal Water Users Association (CWUA), a project of the WfW programme, this thesis analyses to what extent and of what developmental value the environmental EPWP fulfills its objective of skills development. The training model of the WfW programme in the Western Cape, with special focus on the project CWUA, serves as analytical tool. Data was collected through qualitative interviews among WfW officials of the Western Cape Regional and the National Office, and supported by a questionnaire among 79 beneficiaries of the CWUA project using closed dichotomous questions. Furthermore, the research was informed through the review of internal WfW documents such as training matrix, training strategy and literacy assessment results of beneficiaries, as well as a questionnaire conducted by WfW officials and analysed by the researcher. The thesis has found that the training model currently in place deals only with the symptoms of poverty and that the relief is of temporary nature. Skills development ends at the programme boundaries and has little impact on the beneficiaries' enhancement of future employability. The model does not make full use of its potential to contribute to longterm reduction of unemployment. Reasons are found in the multi-objective context of nature conservation, job creation and skills development, which leads to the neglect of the latter. This research adds to the literature of Integrated Conservation and Development (ICD) on a governmental level and questions whether interventions such as the EPWP contribute to the socio-economic development of the South African population from a long-term perspective. 2014-09-02T09:52:58Z 2014-09-02T09:52:58Z 2014 Master Thesis Masters MSocSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6827 eng application/pdf Department of Sociology Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Rönchen, Ann-Kristina
Tackling poverty at its roots: a case study of skills development in integrated conservation and development with the example of the Working For Water programme
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Tackling poverty at its roots: a case study of skills development in integrated conservation and development with the example of the Working For Water programme
title_full Tackling poverty at its roots: a case study of skills development in integrated conservation and development with the example of the Working For Water programme
title_fullStr Tackling poverty at its roots: a case study of skills development in integrated conservation and development with the example of the Working For Water programme
title_full_unstemmed Tackling poverty at its roots: a case study of skills development in integrated conservation and development with the example of the Working For Water programme
title_short Tackling poverty at its roots: a case study of skills development in integrated conservation and development with the example of the Working For Water programme
title_sort tackling poverty at its roots a case study of skills development in integrated conservation and development with the example of the working for water programme
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/6827
work_keys_str_mv AT ronchenannkristina tacklingpovertyatitsrootsacasestudyofskillsdevelopmentinintegratedconservationanddevelopmentwiththeexampleoftheworkingforwaterprogramme