Ref ID : 1905
1372. Mason, S.J., Joubert, A.M., Cosijn, C., and Crimp, S.J. Review of the
current state of seasonal forecasting techniques with applicability to southern
Africa. Water SA 22:203-209, 1996.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : FORECASTING; SOUTHERN AFRICA
Ref ID : 1904
1373. Mason, S.J. and Jury, M.R. Climatic variability and change over southern
Africa: a reflection on underlying processes. Progress in Physical Geography
21(1):23-50, 1997.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : SOUTHERN AFRICA
Ref ID : 1017
1374. Mason, S.J., Lindesay, J.A., and Tyson, P.D. Simulating drought in
southern Africa using sea surface temperature variations. Water SA 20(1):15-22,
1994.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : DROUGHT; MODELS; RAINFALL; CLIMATE
Abstract : Changes in atmospheric circulation that produce droughts over SA are
briefly reviewed, as too are the links between regions of homogeneous sea
surface temperature variation in the oceans around Southern Africa and their
correlation with rainfall over SA. Therafter sea surface temperature anomaly
fields known to be linked to the occurrence of droughts are used to initialise
the 4-level CSIRO general circulation climate model to simulate drought over SA.
Model results are compared with previously developed hypotheses concerning
ocean-atmosphere interactions in the region and are shown to be consistent with
observations in many important respects.
Ref ID : 1243
1375. Massaro, R.J. Beyond participation empowerment for enviromental action in
Tanzania's West Usanbara mountains.Anonymous 1998,p. 24-49.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : CONSERVATION; SOIL EROSION; EROSION; AID; RURAL DEVELOPMENT; EROSION
CONTROL
Notes : For much of this century, the West Usambara Mountains in the north-
eastern Tanzania's Tanga Region, Lushoto District, have been known for
environmental crises and failed conservation programs. The Soil Erosion
Control/Agroforestry Project (SECAP), begun in 1981 as part of the Federal
Republic of Germany's aid to the Tanga Integrated Rural Development Program, may
change that reputation. The project is a community-based, integrated,
ecologically sustainable, economically viable effort to increase people's
capacities to meet their livelihood and development needs as well as an effort
to control and reverse the processes of soil erosion and environmental
degradation in the region. This chapter deals with this project. It describes
the history of this region, detailing the Usambara lands, giving an update on
the evolution of human-environment symbiosis, initial challenges and successful
adaptations, effects of Arab trade, German colonial conquest: balance destroyed,
British administration: crisis intensified, and early Tanzanian administration:
stop-gap intervention. It then goes on to deal with Integrated Rural
Development and soil erosion control in the Tanga region, including the project
process; project components in two villages; project progress; project lessons;
challenges to sustainability and a summary.
Ref ID : 526
1376. Mather, C. Beyond the farm: rural and agricultural geography. In:
Geography in a changing South Africa, edited by Rogerson, C. and McCarthy,
J.Cape Town:Oxford University Press, 1992,p. 229-245.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT; COMMUNAL AREA
Ref ID : 2543
1377. Matshaya, P.V. The agricultural problems and basic needs of rural
communities with special reference to the Hopefield location of Victoria East in
the Province of the Eastern Cape. 1998.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : EASTERN CAPE; CISKEI; AID; AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT; GENDER ASPECTS;
ECONOMIC ASPECTS; RURAL DEVELOPMENT
Notes : The purpose of the study was to investigate the factors that hinder
progress in community development with special reference to the former Ciskei.
Several studies were consulted to aid in the design of coded questionnaires to
obtain accurate information from respondents. A simple random sample of
respondents in ten households was surveyed using interview questionnaires. The
findings include: 1. women headed a large number of the households. The
demographic imbalance suggests that most of the families relied heavily on wage
earnings from outside the location. This tended to be a disincentive to
agricultural development; 2. about one third of respondents were found to be
illiterate. There are few social services available for people of the area; 3.
source information by people in the area was through the radio - 90% of
respondents own their own radio sets; and 4. all a priori stated hypotheses were
accepted. This thesis is obtainable from the Document Centre, Agriculture,
University of Fort Hare. See also ID ref. no. 2339.
Ref ID : 1245
1378. Matthee, J.F. Inleiding tot grondbewaring, Suid- Africa:Staatsdrukker,
1984.pp. 1-127.
Reprint : In File,
Notes : See notes in English translation in ID no: 1247.
Ref ID : 1247
1379. Matthee, J.F. A Primer of Soil Conservation, South Africa:Goverment
Printers, 1984.pp. 1-125.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : SOIL CONSERVATION; CONSERVATION; RAINFALL; EROSION; SOIL EROSION;
LAND USE; RUNOFF; FLOODS; CULTIVATION; EROSION CONTROL; IRRIGATION; WIND EROSION
Notes : The basic premise followed is that a healthy nation can only be built up
on the products of healthy soil. This primer includes various chapters dealing
with the following issues: (1) introduction on soil conservation, its history,
research and techniques and knowledge (2) the mechanics of rainfall erosion,
basic principles and factors affecting rainfall erosion (3) rainfall and amount
of erosion, including the erosion process, rainfall characteristics and
erosivity of rainfall in SA; (4) soils and erosion, including factors which
influence erodibility of soils, problem soils, classification of soils according
to erodibility, and suitability of soils for the construction of soil
conservation works; (5) slope and erosion, including influence of slope
steepness, influence of slope length, modification of slopes and slope
limitations; (6) ground cover and erosion including canopy effect, retardation
effect, residual effect, tillage condition of soil and erosivity distribution;
(7) conservation practices, including contour tillage, contour strip cropping,
and terracing systems; (8) permissible soil loss including loss of productive
soil and offsite damage by sediments; (9) forms of erosion and severity grading,
including main forms of soil erosion, erosion severity grading, other forms of
water erosion and extent of erosion in SA; (10) land use planning (LUP),
including land capability classes, soil inventory, criteria for capability
classes, land use mapping and land capability classification for drier areas;
(11) runoff disposal planning, including natural drainageways, application of
runoff disposal planning, defninitions, principles of runoff disposal planning,
and the planning procedure; (12) mechanical control measures, including relation
between mechanical and biological control and design of mechanical protection
works; (13) runoff intensities, including rainfall intensities, how runoff takes
place, flood frequencies, and estimation of runoff intensities; (14) waterways
including location of waterways, grassed waterways, planning and construction of
waterways, design factors for grassed waterways, design of grassed waterways,
construction and establishment of vegetation, management and maintenance, lined
waterways and piped waterways; (15) stormwater drains, including uses of
stormwater drains, precautions, location, design factors for stormwater drains,
design procedure, and layout, construction and maintenance; (16) terracing
including the functions of terraces, limitations, terrace systems, design of
terrace systems, secondary uses of terraces, planning and layout of terraces,
construction of terraces, maintenance, ploughing and cultivation of terraced
lands and farmabiliity of terraced lands; (17) erosion control on steep lands,
orchards, vineyards, pineries, sugar cane fields including grain crops on steep
lands, orchards and vineyards, pineries and sugar cane fields; (18) erosion
control on irrigation lands, including runoff disposal planning, control of
runoff originating above the irrigation lands, control of runoff from irrigation
lands and flood damage to alluvial lands; (19) reclamation of eroded flood
plans, including description, forms of erosion on flood plains, and remedial
measures; (20) prevention and control of gullies, including causes of gullies,
possible effects of gullying, prevention of gullies, gully control measures,
gully stabilization and reclamation structures for gully beds and sides, and
maintenance of gully control structures; (21) streambank protection, including
causes of streambank erosion, damage caused by streambank erosion, and control
measures; (22) veld improvement including infiltration improvement and water
spreading; (23) wind erosion, including soil movements by wind, damage caused by
wind erosion, factors causing wind erosion, control of wind erosion on arable
lands, control of drifting sands and sand dunes, and synthetic material to
control drifting sands; (24) auxiliary structures and facilities, including
fencing and stock watering installations.
Ref ID : 320
1380. Matthews, E.D. Tukulu - the rebirth of a South African farm,
Lovedale:Lovedale Press, 1956.-178.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : VELD MANAGEMENT; EASTERN CAPE; VEGETATION CHANGE; DESERTIFICATION
CONTROL; SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT; CONSERVATION;
COMMUNAL AREA; CISKEI
Ref ID : 1371
1381. May, J. Poverty and inequality in South Africa. May, J.Unpublished Report.
:1-60, 1998.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : POVERTY; ECONOMIC ASPECTS; POLICY; INSTITUTIONAL ASPECTS; ENERGY;
MONITORING
Notes : In per capita terms SA is an upper-middle-income country, but despite
this relative wealth, the experience of most South African households is of
outright poverty or of continuing vulernability to being poor. In addition, the
distribution of income and wealth in SA is among the most unequal in the world,
and many households still have unsatisfactory access to education, health care,
energy and clean water. This situation is likely to affect not only the
country's social and political stability, but also the development path it
follows: countries with less equal distributions of income and wealth tend not
to grow as rapidly as those with more equitable distributions. This Poverty and
Inequality Report (PIR) reviews the extent and nature of poverty and inequality
in SA, and assesses the current policy farmework for the reduction of both. It
attempts to provide clear conceptual and practical guidelines concerning the
issues which need to be taken into consideration in the formulation of policy,
its implementation, and when monitoring its impact.
Ref ID : 2389
1382. Mayekiso, Z.V. Perception of farmers towards new technologies used in the
production of maize in the Sidubi Poort area. 1989.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : TRANSKEI; LABOUR; AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT; AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION;
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION; SOCIOECONOMIC ASPECTS; POLICY
Notes : The main purpose of the study was to determine the perception of farmers
towards new technologies used in the production of maize in the Sidubi-Poort
area of the Transkei. Both primary and secondary sources were used in generating
the data for this study. A questionnaire was designed to establish the extent
of improved production practices in the area. Other information was gathered
from existing sources in the area of study. A large number of the farmers were
found to be females and a large number of male active and able bodied home
holders were found to be away working elsewhere. Many of the farmers were found
to be relatively advanced in age. Many of the farmers indicated that they had
no contact with extension agents. Other findings relate to informal leadership,
decision-making, labour and income. This thesis is obtainable from the Document
Centre, Faculty of Agriculture (UFH). See ref. I.D. No: 2339.
Ref ID : 2390
1383. Mbangata, M.M. The economic, social and technological viability of
alternative cash crop production by black farmer sin the Peddie South region,
with special reference to pineapples. 1989.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : CISKEI; ECONOMIC ASPECTS; SOCIOECONOMIC ASPECTS; AGRICULTURAL
DEVELOPMENT; RURAL DEVELOPMENT; AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION
Notes : The purposes of this study were: to assess the feasibility of pineapple
farming by Black small farmers; to identify the constraining factors which did
not tend to motivate the farmers and which ultimately retard their progress; and
to find out the technical knowledge that they have so far adopted. The study
essentially generated its data through personal communication and literature
from the Peddie Agricultural Office. Other information was also collected from
the project and section managers. However, information was also collected
through questionnaire surveys. The majority of farmers felt that the present
number of hectares of land on which they work is not sufficient and therefore
wished that it could be increased. The farmers also felt that increasing the
present lands would enable them to rest some sections of the farms. All the
farmers expressed their view that there are no local organisations within the
pineapple farming community. All the farmers were satisfied with the main
marketing source of the pineapples, farmers (70% of them) were found to aspire
to have bigger farms. On the perceptions about pineapple farming, the farmers
perceived pineapple farming as a business and that it was a profitable venture.
Farmers were unhappy about the tractors used on the farms and perceived the
tractor drivers as unco-operative. This thesis is obtainable from the Document
Centre, Faculty of Agriculture, University of Fort Hare. See ref. I.D. no: 2339.
Ref ID : 975
1384. Mbelu, M.M. Past and future options for veld management in the developing
areas of South Africa.Anonymous Alice, Ciskei:Department of Livestock & Pasture
Science. P7043:i-17, 1995.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : VELD MANAGEMENT; COMMUNAL AREA; CISKEI; AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT;
LEGISLATION; SOIL EROSION; EROSION; BUSH ENCROACHMENT; VELD CONDITION;
POPULATION
Notes : It is felt that politicians have contributed to most of the problems
experienced by people in developing areas and they must also be involved in
trying to solve some or most of these problems. Some solutions may even need
legislation as most of these problems were introduced by legislation. It is
important to realise that most people residing in Developing Areas are not
recessarily farmers but are there because they were prevented by legislation
from residing in urban areas. It is also true that there are people in these
areas who are genuinely interested in farming. These farmers should be
identified and trained in various aspects of agriculture in which their
interests lie (e.g. crop farming, livestock farming, etc.). The government must
then make the land available to these farmers for leasing or purchasing. The
community in general must be discouraged from thinking about farming as the only
way of life. Rural areas in general must be provided with essential services
such as electricity, water, primary health care, roads, etc. Job opportunities
should also be created in rural areas in line with the RDP and most if not all
of these areas should be treated as residential areas rather than "farms".
Communal grazing is often associated with degradation of natural resources (soil
erosion, bush encroachment, change in species composition, low productivity,
etc.) and because most of these areas are continuously grazed this management
practice is said to result in veld deterioration. Communal grazing is also
associated with overstocking and resultant overgrazing. However, these
hypotheses have not been proved as yet. For example, it has not been shown
conclusively that continuous grazing results in a change in botanical
composition comparted to rotational grazing. Overstocking has been cited as the
major factor responsible for poor veld condition. This may be true but some
people have a different perception of the cause of poor condition in these
areas. The problem is not just overstocking but it is a general imbalance
between resources and population. There is too much population pressure on the
land in communal areas. One of the recommendations put forward in the text is
that of translocation resettlement so as to relieve pressure on the land and to
allow a more equitable access to grazing. The problem in communal grazing can,
therefore, not be simply blamed on continuous grazing or overstocking. Besides
a sizeable number of people in developing areas do not have livestock and of
those who do very few have enough.
Ref ID : 782
1385. McAllister, P.A. Resistance to 'betterment' in the Transkei: a case study
from Willowvale district. Journal of Southern African Studies 15(2):346-368,
1989.
Reprint : In File,
Keywords : BETTERMENT PLANNING; TRANSKEI; COMMUNAL AREA; POLICY; LABOUR; CISKEI
Notes : Rural people and particularly Red Xhosa resist betterment schemes.
Betterment means a change in the settlement pattern, an assault on the
established political and territorial units, the disappearance of generations-
old neighbourhood groups, economic hardship and an undermining of the ability to
provide a proportion of subsistence needs, increased dependence on migrant
labour earnings and further exposure to urban-industrial lifestyles and values.
In both the Transkei and Ciskei, betterment schemes "played a major part in
finally destroying the Red folk culture as a coherent way of life. Only in the
few locations that have managed to fend off 'rehabilitation' is ubuqaba
lingering on." In Shixini, the maintance of 'traditional' attitudes and values
is closely tied to people's attempts to cope with their precarious economic and
political situation. In a real sense, they are not traditionalists at all, but
innovative countrymen making good use of the cultural resources at their
disposal to maintain a degree of independence from the wider system. Their
resistance to incorporation has been made possible by a particular social
organization, and especially by the network of social and economic relationships
which rely heavily on what appear to be 'traditional' principles - kinship,
neighbourhood and territory. In the light of this, resistance to betterment
makes sense. Betterment undermines the system. It neutralises the forces which
have enabled people to combat further impoverishment and fuller incorporation.
The threat to the Red Xhosa lifestyle posed by betterment is not merely a threat
to what some may regard as an antiquated and outmoded adherence to tradition.
On the contrary, it is a threat to what Beinart and Bundy call 'defensive
traditionalism'. In Shixini tradition has been used to construct a relatively
successful adaptation to a rural situation in which the overwhelming trend has
been towards greater and greater impoverishment of the people though both
drawing them into the wider economy and preventing them from fully sharing in
the fruits of that economy. Seemingly aware of this trap, Red Xhosa have tried
to actively defend their way of life by not allowing themselves to be drawn into
the wider socio-economic system any more than is absolutely necessary, by
consciously rejecting consumerism, by antipathy towards churches and other 'ways
of white people', and by clinging to what they regard as 'proper Xhosa' life.
The Red ideology, in Mayer's words, is a 'passive or active opposition to the
status quo'. That Reds achieve this in some areas, against great odds, is
attributable at least in part to the fact that they have some means of
subsistence in the country and to their relatively undisturbed pattern of
settlement. It is particularly worth emphasising this point in the present
conjuncture because Transkeian officials are showing some flexibility on the
issue of betterment. Funds are short and there is a recognition that previous
schemes have not been successful even when judged within their own terms of
reference. There is a possibility that betterment in Shixini may, in fact, be
scrapped, and replaced with an alternative development project which is
currently being researched and planned by a multidisciplinary team from Rhodes
University with the approval of all parties concerned.
Ref ID : 2422
1386. McAllister, P.A. Development planning and land use in rural Transkei: an
assessment of selected aspects of the Transkei Agricultural Development
study.Anonymous Anonymous Rhodes University, Grahamstown:ISER. , 1991.
Reprint : Not in File,
Keywords : TRANSKEI; AGRICULTURAL DEVELOPMENT; METHODOLOGIES; BETTERMENT
PLANNING; LAND USE; EROSION; RURAL DEVELOPMENT; SETTLEMENT IMPACTS; POLICY;
POLITICAL ASPECTS; POVERTY; LAND TENURE; GRAZING EFFECTS
Notes : The purpose of the paper was to outline some important aspects of the
Transkei Agricultural Development study, consider some recommendations made and
evaluate these against the background of previous attempts at land use planning
and rural developments in the Transkei. The study methodology consisted of a
review of the Transkei Agricultural Development Study document. The report
contains information on betterment planning in the Transkei, residential
relocation, spatial re-organisation, agriculture, ecology, and an assessment of
the study's recommendations. The report reveals the planners' and decison-
makers' lack of knowledge about how rural people live and survive, about how
they use their land and livestock, how they relate to each other and to the
natural environment. The report further reveals the problem of hardship and
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