The economics of culture and cultural statistics in South Africa
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2003
TITLE AUTHOR(S): H.Bhorat, M.Liou
KEYWORDS: CULTURE, STATISTICS
Print: HSRC Library: shelf number 3026
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/7782
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/7782
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
-
Related Research Outputs:
- Managing the design and development of a data warehouse: a case study of the HSRC's human resources development data warehouse project
- Ethical and social dilemmas in community-based controlled trials in situations of poverty: a view from a South African project
- Whose right it is anyway? equality, culture and conflicts of rights in South Africa
- Towards more effective crime prevention in South Africa: the necessity of basic building blocks. Part 1
- Crime analysis and forecasting in South Africa: the need for information. Part 2
- Crime analysis and forecasting in South Africa: the need for information. Part 4
- Education, culture and African renaissance
- 1998 crime statistics with 1996 census data
- Education and culture: report-back from session 2
- Making this our last passive moment: the way forward
- Culture and mental health
- Whose right is it anyway?: equality and conflicts between state policy, culture and rights in South Africa
- Representing infancy across the world: does Osama bin Laden love his children?
- The church of baseball, the fetish of Coca-Cola and the potlatch of rock 'n roll: theoretical models for the study of religion in American popular culture
- Report 2: national stakeholder workshop on gender, culture and rights
- The great leap sideways: gender, culture and rights after 10 years of demcracy in South Africa
- Reflections on perceived conflicts between culture and democracy in Africa: the South African case
- Understanding culture and rights in South Africa today: moving beyond racial hegemony in national identity
- A Bayesian analysis of correlated interval-censored data
- Disability measurement and statistics: the state of the notion