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Centre for Rhetoric Studies Research Report 2006



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Centre for Rhetoric Studies

Research Report 2006



Director: Philippe-Joseph Salazar, Distinguished Professor of Rhetoric

Centre Profile

The Centre was founded in 1995, as an academic response to the establishment of democracy in South Africa, and in the wake of a large international conference on “Persuasion and Power” held in July 1994. The Centre is unique on the Continent and concerns itself with multi-disciplinary research in public rhetoric, deliberative democracy and argumentative culture. In 2006, the Centre hosted two international research projects funded by the National Research Foundation. One on e-democracy (with the Programme in Communication at Corvinus University, Budapest, Hungary) and the other on women’s rhetoric (with the Programme in Rhetoric at the University of Örebro, Sweden).


Information may be found on the Centre’s website http://www.uct.ac.za/depts/rhetoricafrika.


Centre Statistics



Permanent and long-term contract staff


Director

1

Associate Directors (Honorary)

6

Fellows

3

Total

10


Students





Masters by dissertation

1

Masters by coursework

1

Honours electives

3

Total

5



Research Fields and Staff

Distinguished Professor Philippe-Joseph Salazar


Director; rhetoric and philosophy, from the Early Modern period; contemporary political rhetoric; rhetoric and gender; rhetoric and the epistemology of social sciences; public policy rhetoric




Associate Directors (Honorary)
Dr Barbara Cassin
CNRS, Paris, France; philosophy and rhetoric
Professor Maurice Charland

Concordia, Montréal, Canada; rhetorical theory


Dr Erik Doxtader
Wisconsin-Madison, USA; rhetorical theory
Professor Reingard Nethersole

Pretoria; theory of rhetoric and culture


Professor Cezar Ornatowski

San Diego, Cal., USA; rhetoric of democratic change.


Professor C. Jan Swearingen
A&M, Texas, USA; theory of rhetoric and literacy


Fellow


Nicolas Péjout, adviser on e-democracy at the French Foreign Office; electronic media rhetoric



Contact Details

Postal Address: Centre for Rhetoric Studies, Arts Block, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch, 7701

Telephone (cell) : +27 (0)82 902 1207/ +27 21 650 3678/5363

Fax: +27 21 650 2307

E-mail: philippe.salazar@uct.ac.za

Web: http://www.uct.ac.za/depts/rhetoricafrika



Research Output
ARTICLES IN PEER-REVIEWED JOURNALS
Salazar, P.J. 2006. Position et rhétorique de l’historien dans le Siècle de Louis XIV. SVEC [previously Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century], 10: 65-77.
Salazar, P.J. 2006. Rhetoric and anthropology. Anthropology Southern Africa, 29(3/4): 67-73.
Salazar, P.J. 2006. Perspectiva retórica de la Antropología. Revista de Antropología Social, Issue edited by James Fernandez, La Tropologia y la figuracion del pensiamento y la acción social, 15 : 43-61.
Salazar, P.J. 2006. Sous l’opéra. Essai d’anthropologie de la voix. Monitor ZSA, Revija za zgodovinsko, socialno in druge anthropologije [Revue for Historical, Social and Other Anthropologies], Issue edited by Vlado Kotnik, Reflections on Opera / Réflexions sur l'opéra, 8(1-2): 1-14.

CHAPTERS IN BOOKS
Salazar, P.J. 2006. Sur la bonne chère rhétorique – La Mothe Le Vayer politique, B. Guion et al (eds.) Poétique de la pensée. Études sur l'âge classique et le siècle philosophique: 813-823. Paris: Honoré Champion.

Creative Output
Creative Production
Salazar, P.J. 2006. Executive producer, documentary film: Women’s Rhetoric. An Ethnography of Public Speaking in South Africa, Cape Town, From the Hip Productions, (35mn).
Salazar, P.J. 2006. Radio broadcast, France-Culture, Cultures d’Islam, producer, Abdelwahab Meddeb, 07/05/06.

Department of Social Anthropology

Research Report 2006



Head of Department: Associate Professor Andrew Spiegel
Departmental Profile
The Department’s research has a wide theoretical range with a particular but not exclusive focus on southern Africa within the southern hemisphere. Study areas include, domestic dynamics, family violence and pedagogies.
Other topics include memory and identity; narrative in society (including journalism), youth, conflict, urbanisation and housing policy. Particular focus is on media anthropology; ethnographic film & visual anthropology; ethnicity and identity construction; the problems of addressing policy, and the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

Departmental Statistics
Permanent and long-term contract staff


Associate Professors

2

Senior Lecturers

4

Technical and Clerical Staff

1

Total

7



Honorary staff


Honorary Professors

4

Honorary Research Associates

3

Total

7



Students


Postdoctoral Fellow

1

Doctoral

6

Masters

48

Honours

89

Undergraduate

655

Total

799



Research Fields and Staff
Dr Lesley Green

Indigenous history and archeology in the northern Amazon; historiography; traditional & scientific knowledges; cultural astronomy; knowledge archives & new media; public archeology; post-colonial research methodologies


Dr Sally Frankental

Migration; ethnicity; citizenship; ethnicity in South Africa; South African Jewry


Dr Susan Levine

Child labour; visual anthropology; political economy; medical anthropology; gender and sexuality; HIV/AIDS; community development


Associate Professor Fiona Ross

Margins & marginality; housing; home & domesticity; violence; loss & recuperation; gender & vioce; Truth and Reconciliation Commission


Dr Owen Sichone

Ethnicity and new South African identities; xenophobia, xenophilia; Southern African political cultures and informal economies; post-colonial oral history - the case of Urban Zambian music; strategic management of greywater in non-sewered areas of South Africa


Associate Professor Andrew Spiegel

Housing and migration patterns and family relationships; landscape and memory - South Africa; comparative pedagogies; racism



Contact Details

Postal address: Department of Social Anthropology, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch, 7701

Telephone: +27 21 650 3678

Fax: +27 21 650 2307

E-mail: socanth@humanities.uct.ac.za

Web: http://www.uct.ac.za/depts/socialanth/



Research Output
ARTICLES IN PEER-REVIEWED JOURNALS
Brandt, R., Dawes, A. and Bray, R. 2006. Women coping with AIDS in Africa: Contributions of a contextually grounded research methodology. Psychology, Health and Medicine, 11(4): 522-527.
Bray, R. and Gooskens, I. 2006. Ethics and the everyday: Reconsidering approaches to research involving children and young people. Anthropology Southern Africa, 29(1&2): 35-44.
Brokensha, D. 2006. Monica Wilson (1908-1982) and social change. Anthropology Southern Africa, 29(1&2): 1-7.
Comaroff, J. and Comaroff, J.L. 2006. Figuring crime: Quantifacts and the production of the un/real. Public Culture, 18(1): 209-246.
Levine, S. 2006. The 'picaninny wage'. An historical overview of the persistence of structural inequality and child labour in South Africa. Anthropology Southern Africa, 29(3&4): 122-131.
Mkhwanazi, N. 2006. Partial truths: Representations of teenage pregnancy in research. Anthropology Southern Africa, 29(3&4): 96-104.
Ross, F.C. 2006. Linguistic bearings and testimonial practices. Journal of Language and Politics, 5(1): 111-124.

BOOKS
Comaroff, J. and Comaroff, J.L. (eds) 2006. Law and disorder in the postcolony: 357. USA: University of Chicago Press.

CHAPTERS IN BOOKS
Comaroff, J. and Comaroff, J.L. 2006. Criminal obsessions, after Foucault: Postcoloniality, policing, and the metaphysics of disorder. In J. Comaroff and J. L. Comaroff (eds), Law and disorder in the postcolony: 273-298. USA: University of Chicago Press.
Comaroff, J. and Comaroff, J.L. 2006. Law and disorder in the postcolony: An introduction. In J. Comaroff and J. L. Comaroff (eds), Law and disorder in the postcolony: 1-56. USA: University of Chicago Press.
Frankental, S. 2006. Jewish women: South Africa. In P. Hyman and D. Ofer (eds), Jewish women: A comprehensive historical encyclopedia. Jerusalem, Israel: Shalvi.
Hall, M. 2006. The reappearance of the authentic. In I. Karp, C.A. Kratz, L. Szwaja and T. Ybarra-Frausto (eds), Museum frictions: Public cultures/global transformations: 70-101. Durham: Duke University Press.
Pendleton, W., Crush, J. and Tevera, D. 2006. Degrees of uncertainty: Students and the brain drain in Southern Africa. In R. Kishun (ed), The internationalisation of higher education in South Africa: 123-152. Durban: International Education Association of South Africa (IEASA).
Sichone, O.B. 2006. Discourses of the occult in local power struggles in rural Zambia. In P. Geschiere and B. Meyer (eds), The power of occult in modern Africa: Continuity and innovation in the renewal of African cosmologies: 112-125. USA & London: Transaction Publishers.
Van Heerden, E. 2006. Development concerns in Africa: The value of an ethnographic approach. The Social Sciences and Africas' future: 99-122. Dakar, Senegal: CODESRIA.

PEER-REVIEWED PUBLISHED CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS
Armitage, N.P., Carden, K.J., Winter, K.J., Rivett, U.K. and Sichone, O.B. 2006. Developing a model to assess management options for greywater in the informal settlements of South Africa. Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Urban Drainage Modelling and the 4th International Conference on Water Sensitive Urban Design, 3-7 April 2006, Melbourne, Australia, 733-739. ISBN 0-646-45903-1.

NON PEER-REVIEWED PUBLISHED CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS
Carden, K.J., Armitage, N.P., Sichone, O.B., Winter, K.J. and Rivett, U.K. 2006. Management options for the safe use and disposal of greywater in the non-sewered areas of South Africa. Proceedings of WISA - Biennial Conference and Exhibition 2006, Durban, 11.
Crosswaite, I. 2006. Socio-Semiotics Exploring the Social Life of Brands. Proceedings of Qualitative 2006, Athens, 100-117.

THESES AND DISSERTATIONS PASSED FOR HIGHER DEGREES
Bagnol, B.M. 2006. Gender, self, multiple identities, violence and magical interpretations in lovolo practices in Southern Mozambique: 1-273. PhD.
Gooskens, I. 2006. Boundaries and crossing points: children, geography, and identity in Fish Hoek valley: 1-92. MSocSc.
Hughes, C.A. 2006. "Nothing Changes in the Kalahari": Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park, the Ae! Hai Kalahari Heritage park Agreement and the effects of difference, discourse, and the past: i-vi, 1-94. MSocSc.
Leitch, R.A. 2006. Prepared for a world that no longer exists: White Afrikaner males revise identity for a transformed world: i-ii, 1-87. MA (Social Anthropology).

UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS AND WORKS OF A POPULAR NATURE
Pendleton, W., Crush, J., Campbell, E., Green, T., Simelane, H., Tevera, D.S. and De Vletter, F. 2006. Migration, remittances and development in southern Africa. Migration Policy Series 44 (2006): 1-51. IDASA, Cape Town and Southern African Research Centre.
Ross, F.C. 2006. Limits to liberation after apartheid: citizenship, governance and culture. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 2006(12): 971-973.

CONSULTANCY AND OTHER ACTIVITIES BASED ON EXPERTISE DEVELOPED IN RESEARCH
Flisher, A.J., Wolf, Z.N., Selikow, T.-A., Ketye, T.J., Petorius, L. and Mathews, C. 2006. Process evaluation of selected AIDS prevention interventions in high schools in the Western Cape. University of Cape Town, 2006.
Department of Social Development

Research Report 2006
Head of Department: Associate Professor André de V Smit
Departmental Profile
The Department of Social Development provides undergraduate social work education and training commensurate with the professional standards laid down by the South African Council for Social Service Professions. It also offers postgraduate specialist taught programmes in selected social service professions and postgraduate programmes by research. As befits professional training, the Department maintains relationships with a wide variety of community-based organisations where students undergo practical training.
The Department is also involved in a number of extension services at both national and international levels. Its research efforts are directed mainly at meeting the changing social service needs of the country. As such, staff has been involved in policy research in welfare, population growth and social security systems. A substantial grant from national Department of Social Development has enabled staff to conduct research in the fields of probation and youth justice. The Department is jointly involved with other local universities and the Provincial Social Services Department in investigating Western Cape social service provision and client response. Other areas of research include inter alia, mental health, child, youth and family care, spirituality in social work, youth development and conflict resolution.

Departmental Statistics
Permanent and Long-term Contract Staff


Associate Professors

2

Senior Lecturers

4

Senior Researcher

1

Lecturers

3

Administrative and Clerical Staff

2

Total

12



Students


Doctoral

4

Masters

25

Honours

59

Undergraduate

198

Total

286



Research Fields and Staff
Permanent Staff
Associate Professor André de V Smit

Organisational theory; management and administration; social policy; social security; resource allocation


Associate Professor Viviene Taylor

Human security, social policy and development with emphasis on poverty and gender inequalities


Mrs Lily Becker

Senior Lecturer; casework/psychotherapy; groupwork and group psychotherapy; child and family therapy; human development; mental health; professional development


Dr Margaret Booyens

Senior Lecturer; youth development; social development; community development; poverty alleviation; leadership and management in non-profit organizations


Dr Kathleen Collins

Senior Researcher; participatory action research; new research methodologies; work trauma; marriage preparation


Mr Thulane Gxubane

Lecturer, crime and society; probation and correctional practice; youth justice and juvenile offending


Ms Nelleke Keet

Lecturer; psychosocial rehabilitation; mental health rehabilitation; group work in mental health; substance abuse and intervention; social work and animal therapy


Dr Connie O'Brien

Senior Lecturer; community development; mental health issues; cultural diversities; peace education; conflict resolution/mediation; spirituality/counselling


Dr Patrick Smith

Lecturer; social work with children and families; human sexuality and relationships; social work and law/correctional social work; supervision and management; change management; fathering and fatherhood


Mrs Shona Sturgeon

Senior Lecturer; casework; supervision; human resource management; mental health policy and issues



Contact Details

Postal address: Department Social Development, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch, 7701

Telephone: +27 21 650 3493

Fax: +27 21 689 2739

E-mail: Patricia.Halford@uct.ac.za

Research Output
ARTICLES IN PEER-REVIEWED JOURNALS
Gxubane, T. 2006. An insight into recidivism among male awaiting-trial youth offenders and the implications for practice. Social Work: A Professional Journal for the Social Worker, 42(3/4): 307-326.
Kirk, J.G. and Collins, K. 2006. Difference in quality of life of referred hospital patients after hospital palliative care team intervention. South African Medical Journal, 96(2): 101-102.
Sturgeon, S. 2006. Promoting mental health as an essential aspect of health promotion. Health Promotion International, 21: 1-10.

CHAPTERS IN BOOKS
Sturgeon, S. 2006. Concepts of mental health across the world. In H. Herrman, S. Saxena and R. Moodie (eds.), Promoting mental health - concepts, emerging evidence, practice: 59-69. Singapore: World Health Organization.

NON PEER-REVIEWED PUBLISHED CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS
Smit, A. 2006. Funding strategies: Surviving imperial intentions, protean policies and ruthless reality. Proceedings of the Association of South African Social Work Education Institutions Conference, Stellenbosch, 6-7 September 2006. Stellenbosch: University of Stellenbosch.

Centre for Social Science Research

Research Report 2006
Director: Professor Robert Mattes
Centre Profile
The Centre for Social Science Research (CSSR) is an interdisciplinary research centre at the University of Cape Town that is dedicated to systematic social science in the public interest. Research in the CSSR is concerned with understanding human behaviour and the institutional and social dynamics of democracy and economic development in South African and across the continent. Our vision is to promote innovative and policy-relevant quality social science research in Africa.
The CSSR comprises a set of research units which conduct research covering a range of social sciences, including economics, sociology, political science, social anthropology, psychology and statistics. The CSSR provides the focal point where this community of scholars share ideas, comment on each other’s work and co-operate in research projects in a cost-effective manner.
Our mission is:


  • To promote inter-disciplinary research and analysis, including critical work on the methodology and ethics of research

  • To strengthen systematic empirical, especially quantitative, social science research and analysis in South Africa and across the continent.

  • To build capacity, develop skills and integrate teaching and research

  • To facilitate access to and use of census, survey and other data

Current research within the CSSR is focused on democracy and governance, poverty and inequality, HIV/AIDS, health, sexual behaviour, education, social attitudes.


AIDS and Society Research Unit (ASRU)
The AIDS and Society Research Unit (ASRU) supports innovative research into the social dimensions of AIDS in South Africa. Special emphasis is placed on exploring the interface between qualitative and quantitative research. By forging creative links between academic research and outreach activities, we hope to improve our understanding of the relationship between AIDS and society and to make a difference to those living with AIDS. Focus areas include: AIDS-stigma, sexual relationships in the age of AIDS, the social and economic factors influencing disclosure (of HIV-status to others), the interface between traditional medicine and biomedicine, and the impact of providing antiretroviral treatment on individuals and households.
Democracy in Africa Research Unit (DARU)
DARU supports students and scholars who conduct systematic research in the following four areas: public opinion and political culture in Africa and its role in democratisation and consolidation; elections and voting in Africa; the development of legislative institutions; and the impact of the HIV/AIDS pandemic on democratisation in southern Africa. DARU has also developed close working relationships with projects such as the Afrobarometer (a cross- national survey of public opinion in fifteen African countries) and the Comparative National Elections Project, which conducts post-election surveys over 20 countries across the world.
Social Surveys Unit (SSU)
The SSU promotes critical analysis of the methodology, ethics and results of South African social science research. Our core activities include the overlapping Cape Area Study and Cape Area Panel Study. The Cape Area Study comprises a series of surveys of social, economic and political aspects of life in Cape Town. The Cape Area Panel Study is an ongoing study of 4800 young adults in Cape Town as they move from school into the worlds of work, unemployment, adulthood and parenthood.
As from 2006, the CSSR will be reconstituted in accordance with the recommendations of its Management Board and by the University Research Committee. SALDRU will no longer be part of the CSSR, but a research unit within the School of Economics. The Data First Resource Unit will be reconstituted as a university-wide research facility. Both the CSSR and SALDRU will retain close working relationships with key clients of DFRU.

Centre Statistics
Permanent and long-term contract staff


Professors

3

Research Staff

22

Student Researchers

6

Administration and Clerical Staff

4

Fieldworkers and outreach facilitators

11

Total

46



Short-term contract staff


Research Staff

11

Student Researchers

10

Total

21



Research fields and staff
Permanent and contract staff
Professor Robert Mattes

Director of the Centre for Social Science Research; Director of Democracy in Africa Research Unit; public opinion; democratisation; electoral behaviour; social identity; legislatures; survey research


Professor Nicoli Nattrass
Director of the AIDS and Society Research Unit; AIDS; unemployment; inequality; social and economic policy
Professor Jeremy Seekings
Director of Social Surveys Unit; political sociology (race and class; social attitudes, voting behaviour and political protest); comparative politics and political economy of public policy (especially education and welfare policy); democratic theory.
Dr Rachel Bray
Research Fellow (part-time); sociology and anthropology of childhood and youth; social policy
Dr Beatrice Conradie

Research Fellow; farm labour markets; women in agriculture; wine industry mechanisation; irrigation farming


Ms Lia Nijzink

Research Fellow (part-time); manager of African Legislatures Project; comparative study of representative institutions, parliamentary procedures and practices, democratization and the quality of democracy.


Ms Kimberly Smiddy

Research Fellow; manager of NORAD-Funded Afrobarometer capacity-building project; representation, constituency services, legislative-executive relations, vertical accountability, and the quality of democracy.


Dr Per Strand

Research Fellow (part-time); AIDS and democracy
Dr Joanne Wreford

Research Fellow; relationships between Traditional African Healing (TAH) and biomedicine in HIV/AIDS interventions; TAH and HIV/AIDS; children, TAH and treatment for HIV/AIDS.
Dr Ingrid Woolard

Research Fellow; poverty and inequality measurement


Mr Colin Almeleh
Junior Research Fellow; Mapping our Lives outreach co-ordinator; training and evaluation
Ms Jacqueline Borel-Saladin

Junior Research Fellow; Comparative National Election Project data manager


Ms Celeste Coetzee

Junior Research Fellow; Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART); labour


Mrs Monique Glass

Junior Research Fellow; Khayelitsha survey data


Ms Elizabeth Mills

Junior Research Fellow; AIDS; gender; medical anthropology of illness and healing; transitional justice and democracy; political economy of HIV and AIDS treatment.


Ms Susan Moses

Junior Research Fellow; sociology and anthropology of childhood and youth, social policy and children


Ms Lara Skelley

Junior Research Fellow; farm labour markets



Distinguished Visitors
Professor Neuma Aguiar

Faculdade de Folosofia e Ciencias Humanas, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte University, Brazil


Professor Paul Attewell

Sociology Programme, City University of New York (CUNY), New York, USA


Professor Miguel Centeno

Department of Sociology and Public Affairs, Princeton University, United States


Professor Otavio Dulci

Faculdade de Folosofia e Ciencias Humanas, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte University, Brazil


Professor James Gibson

Department of Political Science, George Washington University, St Louis, United States


Professor AS Guimaraes

Sociology Department, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil


Professor Nadya Guimaraes

Sociology Department, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil


Professor Katherine Newman

Department of Sociology and Public Affairs, Princeton University, United States


Professor Shaheen Mozaffar

Department of Political Science, Bridgewater State College, United States
Professor Devah Pager

Department of Sociology, Princeton University, United States


Professor Antonio Augusto Prates

Faculdade de Folosofia e Ciencias Humanas, Federal University of Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte University, Brazil


Professor Solange Simoes

Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, United States


Professor Ali Tasiran

Department of Economics, Gothenburg University, Sweden


Professor SK Thorat

University Grants Commission, Jawaharlal Nehru University and Indian Institute of Dalit Studies, Delhi


Dr Eric Hershberg

Social Science Research Council, New York, United States


Mr Alfred Chaikor

Staff member of the National Assembly of Nigeria


Mr Ishaya Habu

Staff member of the National Assembly of Nigeria


Contact Details
Centre for Social Science Research

Postal address: Centre for Social Science Research, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch, 7701

Telephone: +27 21 650 4656

Fax: +27 21 650 4657

E-mail: Kathleen.Forbes@uct.ac.za

Web: http://www.cssr.uct.ac.za


AIDS and Society Research Unit

Postal address: ASRU, Centre for Social Science Research, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch, 7701

Telephone: +27 21 650 4656

Fax: +27 21 650 4657

E-mail: Kathleen.Forbes@uct.ac.za

Web: http://www.cssr.uct.ac.za/asru.html


Democracy in Africa Research Unit

Postal address: DARU, Centre for Social Science Research, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch, 7701

Telephone: +27 21 650 3827

Fax: +27 21 650 4657

E-mail: edownes@commerce.uct.ac.za

Web: http://www.cssr.uct.ac.za/daru.html


Social Surveys Unit

Postal address: SSU, Centre for Social Science Research, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch, 7701

Telephone: +27 21 650 3505

Fax: +27 21 650 4657

E-mail: Kathleen.Forbes@uct.ac.za

Web: http://www.cssr.uct.ac.za/ssu.html




Research Output
ARTICLES IN PEER-REVIEWED JOURNALS
Almeleh, C. 2006. Why do people disclose their HIV status? Qualitative evidence from a group of activist women in Khayelitsha. Social Dynamics, 32(2): 136-69.
Almeleh, C., Grimwood, A., Hausler, H. and Hassan, F. 2006. HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis treatment update. South African Health Review: 65-76.
Ashforth, A. 2005. Muthi, medicine and witchcraft: Regulating ‘African science’ in post-apartheid South Africa. Social Dynamics, 31(2): 211-42.
Ashforth, A. and Nattrass, N. 2005. Ambiguities of culture and the antiretroviral rollout in South Africa. Social Dynamics, 31(2): 285-303.
Brandt, R., Dawes, A.R.L. and Bray, R. 2006. Women coping with AIDS in Africa: Contributions of a contextually grounded research methodology. Psychology, Health and Medicine, 11(4): 522-527.
Bray, R. and Gooskens, I. 2006. Ethics and the Everyday: Reconsidering approaches to research involving children and young people. Anthropology Southern Africa, 29(1&2): 35-44.
Case, A. and Ardington, C. 2006. The impact of parental death on school enrollment and achievement: Longitudinal evidence from South Africa. Demography, 43(3): 401-420.
Devenish, A. 2005. Negotiating healing: Understanding the dynamics amongst traditional healers in KwaZulu-Natal as they engage with professionalisation. Social Dynamics, 31(2): 243-84.
Geffen, N. 2005. Echoes of Lysenko: State-sponsored pseudo-science in South Africa. Social Dynamics, 31(2): 183-210.
Gooskens, I. 2006. Boundaries and crossing points: Children, geography and identity in the Fish Hoek valley. Social Dynamics, 32(1): 35-68.
Kahn, L. 2006. Narratives of sexual abstinence: A qualitative study of female adolescents in a Cape Town community. Social Dynamics, 32(1): 75-101.
Magruder, J. and Nattrass, N. 2006. Exploring attrition bias: The case of the Khayelitsha Panel Study (2000-2004). South African Journal of Economics, 74(4): 769-781.
Mall, S. 2005. Attitudes of healthcare professionals to the use of traditional medicine by their patients on antiretroviral treatment: A research note. Social Dynamics, 31(2): 118-25.
Mattes, R. 2006. How does South Africa compare? Experiences of crime and policing in an African context. SA Crime Quarterly, 18: 17-24.
Mattes, R. 2006. Good news and bad: Public perceptions of crime, corruption and government. SA Crime Quarterly, 18: 9-16.
Maughan-Brown, B. 2006. Attitudes towards people with HIV/AIDS: Stigma and its determinants amongst young adults in Cape Town, South Africa. South African Review of Sociology, 37(2): 165-88.
Meintjies, H. and Bray, R. 2005. 'But where are our moral heroes?' An analysis of South African press reporting on children affected by HIV/AIDS. African Journal of AIDS Research (AJAR), 4(3): 147-159.
Mills, E.A. 2006. From the physical self to the social body: Expressions and effects of HIV-related stigma in South Africa. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 16(6): 498-503.
Mills, E. 2005. HIV illness meanings and collaborative healing strategies in South Africa. Social Dynamics, 31(2): 126-60.
Moses, S. 2006. The impact of neighbourhood-level factors on children’s everyday lives, well-being and identity: A qualitative study of children living in Ocean View, Cape Town. Social Dynamics, 32(1): 102-34.
Nattrass, N. 2005. Who consults sangomas in Khayelitsha?: An exploratory quantitative analysis. Social Dynamics, 31(2): 161-82.
Nattrass, N. 2005. The quest for healing in South Africa’s age of AIDS. Social Dynamics, 31(2): 1-23.
Nattrass, N. 2006. Trading off income and health: AIDS and the disability grant in South Africa. Journal of Social Policy, 35 (1): 3-19.
Nattrass, N. 2006. South Africa’s ‘rollout’ of antiretroviral treatment: A critical assessment. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, 43(5): 618-23.
Nattrass, N. 2006. Antiretroviral treatment and the problem of political will in South Africa. Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine, 23: 29-31.
Nattrass, N. 2006. What determines cross-country access to antiretroviral treatment? Development Policy Review, 24(3): 321-337.
Nattrass, N. 2006. When HIV clinicians prevent social scientists from accessing 'their' patients: Some ethical concerns. Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine, 22: 16-18.
Nijzink, L., Mozaffar, S. and Azevedo, E. 2006. Parliaments and the enhancement of democracy on the African continent: An analysis of institutional capacity and public perceptions. Journal of Legislative Studies (Special Double Issue on Comparing and Classifying Legislatures), 12(3-4): 311-335.
Seekings, J. 2006. Employment guarantee or minimum income? Workfare and welfare in developing countries. International Journal of Environment, Workplace and Employment, 2(1): 44-68.
Seekings, J. 2006. Beyond heroes and villains: The rediscovery of the ordinary in the study of childhood and adolescence in South Africa. Social Dynamics, 32(1): 1-20.
Seekings, J. 2006. Partisan realignment in Cape Town, 1994-2004. Journal of African Elections, 5(1): 176-203.
Shelmerdine, S. 2006. Relationships between adolescents and adults: The significance of narrative and context. Social Dynamics, 32(1): 169-94.
Wreford, J. 2005. Missing each other: Problems and potentials for collaborative efforts between biomedicine and traditional healers in South Africa in the time of AIDS. Social Dynamics, 31(2): 55-89.
Wreford, J. 2005. ‘Sincedisa. We can help!’: A literature review of current practice involving traditional African healers in biomedical HIV/AIDS interventions in South Africa. Social Dynamics, 31(2): 90-117.

BOOKS
Seekings, J. and Nattrass, N. 2006. Class, race and inequality in South Africa. Pietermaritzburg: University of KwaZulu-Natal Press.
Nattrass, N. (ed.) 2005. AIDS and healing strategies in South Africa, special issue of Social Dynamics, 31(2): 1-303.
Seekings, J. (ed.) 2006. Childhood and adolescence in Southern and Eastern Africa, special issue of Social Dynamics, 32(1): 1-216.

CHAPTERS IN BOOKS
Lam, D., Leibbrandt, M. and Ranchhod, V. 2006. Labour force withdrawal of the elderly in South Africa. In B. Cohen and J. Menken (eds), Aging in Sub-Saharan Africa: Recommendations for furthering research: 213-248. Washington D.C.: The National Academies Press.
Mattes, R. 2006. Public opinion research in new democracies: Are the processes different? In W. Donsbach and M. Traugott (eds), Handbook of public opinion research. London: Sage Publications.
Nattrass, N. 2006. AIDS, Behindertenpolitik und die Grundeinkommensdebatte in Sűdafrika. In M. Fűllsack (ed.), Globale Soziale Sicherheit: Grundeinkommen – Welfweit: 151-8. Berlin: Avinus.
Nattrass, N. 2006. Disability and welfare in South Africa’s era of unemployment and AIDS. In S. Buhlungu, J. Daniel, R. Southall and J. Lutchman (eds), State of the nation: South Africa 2007. Cape Town: Human Sciences Research Council.
Nijzink, L. and Azevedo, E. 2006. Semi-presidentialism in Guinea Bissau: The lesser of two evils? In S. Moestrup and R. Elgie (eds), Semi-presidentialism outside Europe. London: Taylor and Francis.
Schulz-Herzenberg, C. 2006. A silent revolution: South African voters, 1994 - 2006. In S. Buhlungu, J. Daniel, R. Southall and J. Lutchman (eds), State of the nation: South Africa 2007: 114-115. Cape Town: Human Sciences Research Council.

UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS AND WORKS OF A POPULAR NATURE
Almeleh, C. 2006. Why do people disclose their HIV status? Qualitative evidence from a group of activist women in Khayelitsha, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 163. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Almeleh, C., Grimwood, A. and Mendelson, F. 2006. Community adherence worker training manual. A joint publication between ARK (Absolute Return for Kids) and ASRU (AIDS and Society Research Unit within the CSSR).
Ashforth, A. and Nattrass, N. 2006. Ambiguities of ‘culture’ and the antiretroviral rollout in South Africa, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 156. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Brandt, R. 2006. Does mental health matter for poor, HIV-infected women/mothers in the era of HAART? Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 166. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Bruera, E. 2006. The Political Economy of Antiretroviral Drugs. Centre for Social Science Working Paper 179. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Cameron, R. and Alvarez, A. 2006. Metropolitanisation and political change in South Africa. Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 173. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Casey, T. 2006. Bibliography of research on HIV/AIDS conducted at the University of Cape Town, 2001-2006. Centre for Social Science Research, Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Coetzee, C. 2006. A Practical Guide to Survival Data Analysis for Panel Surveys using STATA. Cape Town: Centre for Social Science Research, University of Cape Town.
Coetzee, C. Tasiran, A. 2006. The determinants of perceived health and labour force participation of people with HIV/AIDS in Khayelitsha, South Africa. Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 174. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Conradie, B. 2006. Revisiting Labour Casualisation on Fruit Farms in the Western Cape. Centre for Social Science Working Paper 177. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Conradie, B. 2006. Vooruitsigte vir Minimum Lone vir die Landbou, Wat Boere Daarvan Dink en Hoe dit hulle Arbeidsbesluite Affekteer. Cape Town: Centre for Social Science Research, University of Cape Town.
De Lannoy, A. 2006. Vulnerability, Care and Support in and through Schools: a review of school-based research. Paper prepared for the Caring Schools Project. Cape Town: Children's Institute, University of Cape Town.
Delannoy, A. 2006. 'De VN top rond HIV en AIDS: stigmatisering op topniveau?', "Wereldbeeld", [Belgian magazine of the United Nations Association Flanders], issue 135, 2006/3, p19-20.
Devenish, A. 2006. Negotiating healing: The politics of professionalisation amongst traditional healers in Kwazulu-Natal, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 153. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Geffen, N. 2006. Echoes of Lysenko: State-sponsored pseudo-science in South Africa, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 149. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Geffen, N., Nattrass, N. and G. Gray. HIV denialists ignore large gap in the study they cite. Correspondence, Nature, 441, 406, (25 May, 2006). Available on: http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v441/n7092/full/441406c.html.
Gooskens, I. 2006. Boundaries and Crossing Points: Children, geography and identity in the Fish Hoek valley, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 168. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Mattes, R. 2006. Is South Africa’s Public Service ‘User Friendly?’ Afrobarometer Briefing Papers, no. 41. East Lansing, Mi. / Cape Town / Accra: Afrobarometer.
Mattes, R. 2006. Resurgent Perceptions of Corruption in South Africa, Afrobarometer Briefing Papers, no. 43. East Lansing, Mi. / Cape Town / Accra: Afrobarometer.
Mattes, R. 2006. South Africans’ Ratings of Government Performance, Afrobarometer Briefing Papers, no. 44. East Lansing, Mi. / Cape Town / Accra: Afrobarometer.
Mattes, R. 2006. Surging Economic Optimism Amidst Enduring Poverty, Afrobarometer Briefing Papers, no. 42. East Lansing, Mi. / Cape Town / Accra: Afrobarometer.
Mattes, R. 2006. The Public Agenda: Change and Stability in South Africans’ Ratings of National Priorities, Afrobarometer Briefing Papers, no. 45. East Lansing, Mi. / Cape Town / Accra: Afrobarometer.
Maughan-Brown, B. 2006. Quantifying Stigma in the Adult Population of Cape Town, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 165. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Naimak, T. 2006. Antiretroviral treatment in the Western Cape: A Success Story facilitated by the Global Fund, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 161. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Nathan, G. 2006. Echoes of Lysenko: State-sponsored pseudo-science in South Africa, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 149. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Nattrass, N. 2006. A Practical Guide to Regression Analysis for Cross-Sectional Surveys using Stata. (Revised and updated version of 2005 print). Centre for Social Science Research. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Nattrass, N. 2006. AIDS and the scientific governance of medicine in South Africa. Centre for Social Science Working Paper 176. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Nattrass, N. 2006. AIDS, gender and access to antiretroviral treatment in South Africa. Centre for Social Science Working Paper 178. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Nattrass, N. 2006. Antiretroviral Treatment and the Problem of Political Will in South Africa. Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine, 23: 29-31.
Nattrass, N. 2006. Charles Feinstein and South African economic history. Journal of Southern African Studies 32(4): 842-3.
Nattrass, N. 2006. Disability and welfare in South Africa’s era of unemployment and Aids, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 147. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Nattrass, N. 2006. Review of the macroeconomics of HIV/AIDS by Markus Haacker. Journal of Economic Literature vol. XLIV (March 2006).
Nattrass, N. 2006. South Africa’s ‘rollout’ of highly active antiretroviral therapy: a critical assessment, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 158. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Nattrass, N. 2006. The quest for healing in South Africa’s age of AIDS, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 155. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Nattrass, N. 2006. When HIV clinicians prevent social scientists from accessing 'their' patients: Some ethical concerns. Southern African Journal of HIV Medicine, 22: 16-18.
Nattrass, N. 2006. Who consults sangomas in Khayelitsha? An exploratory quantitative analysis, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 151. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Nattrass, N., Rivett, U. and Wessels, X. 2006. Improving the efficiency of monitoring adherence to antiretroviral therapy: A case study of the introduction of electronic technologies in Gugulethu, South Africa. Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 148. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Ndlovu, V. 2006. Gender and reproductive decision making among couples with HIV/AIDS in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 171. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Ndlovu, V. 2006. The impact of HAART on the reproductive decision making process of HIV positive people in Zimbabwe in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe. Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 172. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Nijzink, L., Mozaffar, S. and Azevedo, E. 2006. Can parliaments enhance the quality of democracy on the African continent? An analysis of institutional capacity and public perceptions, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 160. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Richey, L. 2006. Gendering the Therapeutic Citizen: ARVs and Reproductive Health. Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 175. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Schöer, V. and Leibbrandt, M. 2006. Determinants of job search strategies: Evidence from the Khayelitsha/ Mitchell's Plan Survey, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 167. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Schulz-Herzenberg, C. 2006. A Silent Revolution: South African voters during the first years of democracy 1994-2006, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 162. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Seekings, J. 2006. “Not a single white person should be allowed to go under”: Swartgevaar and the origins of South Africa’s welfare state, 1924-1929, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 154. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Seekings, J. 2006. “Pa’s pension”: The origins of non-contributory old-age pensions in late colonial Barbados, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 164. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Seekings, J. 2006. Employment guarantee or minimum income? Workfare and welfare in developing countries, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 152. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Seekings, J. 2006. The Carnegie Commission and the Backlash Against Welfare State-Building in South Africa, 1931-1937, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 159. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Wienand, A. An evaluation of body mapping as a potential HIV/AIDS educational tool. Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 169. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Wienand, A. 2006. Body map workshop, facilitator's guide. Cape Town: Centre for Social Science Research, University of Cape Town.
Wreford, J. 2006. Some Elements of Sangoma Speak. In Rev. Fr. S. Hippler, M. Esser, and J. Wreford (Eds), Bridging Culture - Introducing Partnership. Cape Town: HOPE.
Wreford, J. 2006. 'We can help!’ - A literature of current practice involving traditional African healers in biomedical HIV/AIDS interventions in South Africa. Rev. Fr. S. Hippler, M. Esser, J. Wreford. (Eds) Bridging Culture - Introducing Partnership. Cape Town: HOPE.
Wreford, J. 2006. Facilitating relationships between African traditional healing and western medicine in South Africa in the time of AIDS: A case study from the Western Cape. Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 170. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.
Wreford, J. 2006. Talking with the white: Sharing the experiences of white sangoma in contemporary South Africa, Centre for Social Science Working Paper, 150. Cape Town: University of Cape Town.

NON PEER-REVIEWED PUBLISHED CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS
Azevedo, E. 2006. African citizens’ perceptions of presidents vs parliaments. In The First Annual EISA Symposium: Challenges for Democratic Governance and Human Development in Africa. Symposium report.
Mattes, R. 2006. Voter behaviour and party dominance in South Africa: Another view.  In Challenges to Democracy by One Party Dominance: A Comparative Assessment.  A Konrad Adenauer Foundation Seminar Report.

EXTENSION AND DEVELOPMENT WORK
Bird, W., Bray, R., Harries, G., Meintjies, H., Monson, J. and Ridgard, N. 2006. Reporting on children in the context of HIV/AIDS: A journalist's resource. Children's Institute, University of Cape Town.



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