A critical skills attraction index for South Africa: final fieldwork report
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2016
TITLE AUTHOR(S): E.Owusu-Sekyere, B.Kanyane, J.Viljoen, O.Tshitiza, M.Wentzel, L.Sakoane, N.Pophiwa
KEYWORDS: MIGRANTS, SKILLS PROFILE
DEPARTMENT: Developmental, Capable and Ethical State (DCES), African Institute of South Africa (AISA)
Print: HSRC Library: shelf number 9745
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/10889
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/10889
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
Abstract
This report presents the findings of qualitative research on the experience of skilled migrants in South Africa. The research is part of a broader project aimed at understanding skilled migration and how South Africa can improve its attractiveness to the 'best and brightest talent' needed for economic growth and development, i.e. attract, recruit and retain critical skills.-
Related Research Outputs:
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- The importance and implications of historical factors causing and inhibiting past migration in South Africa
- Skills development strategy initiative (SDSI) support programme: a knowledge and skills profile of registered skills development facilitators in the mining and minerals sector
- Forecasting the demand for scarce skills, 2001-2006
- HRD and the skills crisis
- Introduction: the shifting understandings of skills in South Africa since industrialisation
- Sectoral insights into the scarce skills debate
- Who infects whom? HIV-1 concordance and discordance among migrant and non-migrant couples in South Africa
- There's space for Africa in the new South Africa?: African migrants and urban governance in Johannesburg
- Developing a national skills forecasting tool for South Africa
- Overcoming underdevelopment in South Africa's second economy: 2005 development report
- Risk factors of sexually transmitted infections among migrant and non-migrant sexual partnerships from rural South Africa
- Debating high skills and joined-up policy
- High skills and joined-up policy: an introduction to the debate
- Self-employment and the required skills
- Introduction
- Skills analysis in the book-publishing subsector
- Analysis of interval-censored data from circular migrant and non-migrant sexual partnerships using the EM algorithm
- Earnings inequality in South Africa 1995-2003
- ICT skills at the intermediate level in South Africa: insights into private provision and labour market demand