Preliminary evaluation of the open democracy bill and interim policy guidelines for spatial information
PUBLICATION YEAR: 1999
TITLE AUTHOR(S): C.A.Schwabe
KEYWORDS: ACCESS TO INFORMATION, SPATIAL INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Print: HSRC Library: shelf number 1447
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/8289
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/8289
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
- Spatial information system for municipalities in South Africa
- Geo-demographics, LSM's and modelling
- African renaissance: towards the development of a spatial information system for socio-economic development in Africa
- GIS as a tool to define, understand and add value to your market
- Towards the development of a spatial information model for crime analysis in South Africa
- GIS, health and NEPAD: the role of spatial information in meeting a key social priority
- The state of the archives and access to information
- State-media relations in post-apartheid South Africa: an application of comparative media systems theory
- Spatial frameworks for the analysis of road traffic injuries
- Credibility kriging of spatial inequalities
- Extent of access to information and communications technology by the rural population of South Africa
- Unemployment in South Africa: building a spatio-temporal understanding
- An overview of the geographic data of unemployment in South Africa
- Towards an understanding of the spatial aspects of social cohesion in South Africa
- Assessing the potential role of open data in South African environmental management
- Neither this or that: spatial dynamics of poverty and unemployment in South Africa
- An inconvenient marriage: media freedom and access to information in Africa: the South African perspective
- Access to information technologies and consumption of fruits and vegetables in South Africa: evidence from nationally representative data
- Sharing information through television and mobile devices can help improve the consumption of fruit and vegetables