Planning and transformation: learning from the post-apartheid experience
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2008
TITLE AUTHOR(S): P.Harrison, A.Todes, V.Watson
KEYWORDS: DEVELOPMENT, POST APARTHEID SOUTH AFRICA, TRANSFORMATION
Print: HSRC Library: shelf number 4937
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/5738
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/5738
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
Abstract
This book provides a comprehensive view of planning under political transition in South Africa, offering an accessible resource for both students and researchers from international and local audiences.-
Related Research Outputs:
- Targeting and mapping the needs of the poor
- Development funding in South Africa 1998-1999
- Where are we ten years later?: the complexity of South African education transition
- The developmental state, two economies, and the implications for skills development in the public sector: conceptual issues
- South Africa's emerging black middle class
- Overcoming underdevelopment in South Africa's second economy: 2005 development report
- Introduction: can South Africa be a developmental state?
- Book review: Davids, I., Theron, F. and Maphunye, K.J. (2005) Participatory development in South Africa: a development management perspective. Pretoria: Van Schaik. 237p.
- Is South Africa burning in Paris?
- Conclusion: Cosatu and the democratic transformation of South Africa
- Observations on defining a developmental state administration in South Africa
- Women, decentralisation and integrated development planning in South Africa: final results report
- Safaris, soccer and the silver screen: South Africa's emergent soft power
- Continuing a debate: the challenges of organising an academic conference in a divided society
- A contradictory class location?: the African corporate middle class and the burden of race in South Africa
- Racial redress & citizenship in South Africa
- Education, growth, aid and development: towards education for all
- Preface
- Bridging the second economy
- Will SA retreat from Africa?