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The Liesbeek River Valley
\ UNIVERSITY OF CAPE TOWN FACULTY OF EDUCATION THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE OF THE LIESBEEK RIVER VALLEY An investigation of the use of an Environmental History approach in ·historical research and in classroom practice A dissertation presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of M.Ed in History Education \ -...... by JEAN ·BOTIARO MARCH 1996 ' f . , ,:.,- I'.! ' . t. c .-: . The copyright of this thesis vests in the author. No quotation from it or information derived from it is to be published without full acknowledgement of the source. The thesis is to be used for private study or non- commercial research purposes only. Published by the University of Cape Town (UCT) in terms of the non-exclusive license granted to UCT by the author. This dissertation has two components, one History and one Education, and the central unifying theme is Environmental History. The History component examines the historiography of this sub-discipline, and then applies an environmental analysis as an example of its use in historical research. The second component explores the use of Environmental History in the teaching of school history, and presents a curriculum model which uses this approach. Both components use the Liesbeek River valley in the Cape Peninsula as a case-study. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I need to start off by thanking the person who provided the spark from which this dissertation grew: in June 1994, when I was rather desperately casting about for a research topic which would satisfy both the historical and education components of the course, Howard Phillips of the History Department at UCT mentioned the term "Environmental History". -
Cape Town's Film Permit Guide
Location Filming In Cape Town a film permit guide THIS CITY WORKS FOR YOU MESSAGE FROM THE MAYOR We are exceptionally proud of this, the 1st edition of The Film Permit Guide. This book provides information to filmmakers on film permitting and filming, and also acts as an information source for communities impacted by film activities in Cape Town and the Western Cape and will supply our local and international visitors and filmmakers with vital guidelines on the film industry. Cape Town’s film industry is a perfect reflection of the South African success story. We have matured into a world class, globally competitive film environment. With its rich diversity of landscapes and architecture, sublime weather conditions, world-class crews and production houses, not to mention a very hospitable exchange rate, we give you the best of, well, all worlds. ALDERMAN NOMAINDIA MFEKETO Executive Mayor City of Cape Town MESSAGE FROM ALDERMAN SITONGA The City of Cape Town recognises the valuable contribution of filming to the economic and cultural environment of Cape Town. I am therefore, upbeat about the introduction of this Film Permit Guide and the manner in which it is presented. This guide will be a vitally important communication tool to continue the positive relationship between the film industry, the community and the City of Cape Town. Through this guide, I am looking forward to seeing the strengthening of our thriving relationship with all roleplayers in the industry. ALDERMAN CLIFFORD SITONGA Mayoral Committee Member for Economic, Social Development and Tourism City of Cape Town CONTENTS C. Page 1. -
City Libraries Offering the Drop-And-Go Service 21 September
21 September 2020 City libraries offering the Drop-and-Go service Name of the Library Telephone Numbers Address Email Address Adriaanse Library 021 444 2392 Adriaanse Avenue, Elsies River 7490 [email protected] Belhar Library 021 814 1315 Blackberry Crescent, Belhar 7493 [email protected] Bellville Library 021 444 0300 Carel Van Aswegen Street, Bellville 7530 [email protected] Bellville South Library 021 951 4370 Kasselsvlei Road, Bellville South 7530 [email protected] Brackenfell Library 021 400 3806 Paradys Street, Brackenfell, 7560 [email protected] Central Library 021 444 0983 Drill Hall, Parade Street, Cape Town,8001 [email protected] Colin Eglin Sea Point Library 021 400 4184 Civic Centre, Cnr Three Anchor Bay & Main Rds, Sea Point 8001 [email protected] Crossroads Library 021 444 2533 Philippi Village, Cwangco Crescent, Philippi 7781 [email protected] Delft Library 021 400 3678 Cnr Delft & Voorbrug Road, Delft 7210 [email protected] Du Noon Library 021 400 6401/2 2 Waxberry Street, Du Noon 7441 [email protected] Durbanville Library 021 444 7070 Cnr Oxford & Koeberg Rd, Durbanville 7550 [email protected] Edgemead Library 021 444 7352 Edgemead Avenue, Edgemead 7460 [email protected] Eersterivier Library 021 444 7670 Cnr Bobs Way & Beverley Street, Eerste River 7100 [email protected] Fisantekraal Library 021 444 9259 Cnr Dullah -
Why the City of Cape Town Could and Should Budget to Spend More on Informal Settlement Taps and Toilets in 2020/2021
budget OCTOBERanalysis 2020 1/9 A 1 CITY OF CAPE TOWN 26 OCTOBER 2020 A ASIVIKELANE LET’S PROTECT ONE ANOTHER VOICES OF INFORMAL SETTLEMENT RESIDENTS DURING THE COVID-19 CRISIS WHY THE CITY OF CAPE TOWN COULD AND SHOULD BUDGET TO SPEND MORE ON INFORMAL SETTLEMENT TAPS AND TOILETS IN 2020/2021 by Carlene van der Westhuizen and Albert van Zyl, October 2020 Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, a 2018 study warned that in informal settlements “the unclean- liness of the existing sanitation facilities contributes to health issues like water-borne diseases.” 1 As the last six months of Asivikelane data show, large numbers of Cape Town informal settlement residents share communal taps and toilets, and these high-use facilities are not sufficiently maintained.2 These chal- lenges were highlighted by COVID-19, but they preceded it and will persist and escalate unless the City of Cape Town responds on a much larger scale. Our analysis shows that despite the COVID-19 pandemic, the City of Cape Town has not increased its budget allocations for informal settlements taps and toilets in its main 2020/21 budget or subsequent adjustment budgets. The City did, however, budget for an accumulated cash surplus of over R5 billion at the end of the current financial year. The City could therefore afford to scale up its delivery of informal settlement services significantly without posing a risk to its long-term fiscal health. Like every other government in the world, now is the time for the City to dig into its reserves to respond to the current crisis and prevent future crises. -
City of Cape Town Draft 2016
CITY OF CAPE TOWN DRAFT 2016 – 2017 SERVICE DELIVERY AND BUDGET IMPLEMENTATION PLAN (16 March 2016) The Draft Service Delivery and Budget Implementation Plan for The City of Cape Town 2016/2017 MESSAGE FROM THE EXECUTIVE MAYOR (Message from the Executive Mayor to be included in the Final 2016 - 2017 SDBIP Book) TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................. 1 2. LEGISLATIVE IMPERATIVE .............................................................................................. 2 3. LINK TO THE IDP AND THE BUDGET ............................................................................... 3 4. REPORTING ON THE SDBIP ............................................................................................ 4 4.1 Monthly Reporting ................................................................................................................................. 4 4.2 Quarterly Reporting ............................................................................................................................... 5 4.3 Mid–year Reporting ............................................................................................................................... 5 5. MEASURABLE PERFORMANCE OBJECTIVES AND INDICATORS .................................. 6 5.1 Planning Performance .......................................................................................................................... 7 5.2 Monitoring, Measuring, Evaluating and -
2016 – 2017 Service Delivery and Budget Implementation Plan
2016 – 2017 SERVICE DELIVERY AND BUDGET IMPLEMENTATION PLAN The Service Delivery and Budget Implementation Plan for The City of Cape Town 2016/2017 CONSIDERED BY THE EXECUTIVE MAYOR EXECUTIVE MAYOR NOT APPROVED COMMENT: DATE MESSAGE FROM THE EXECUTIVE MAYOR We have officially reached the final lap of the Integrated Development Plan term, and what a journey it has been. This time has offered us learnings and lessons gained from our accomplishments and our shortcomings. The City’s Service Delivery and Budget Implementation Plan (SDBIP) gives practical effect to our Integrated Development Plan (IDP) and budget. Its processes and frameworks are used as the benchmarks of service delivery, ensuring the accountability of the administration and its officials and quality services to all citizens of Cape own.T When we drew up the Integrated Development Plan in 2011 we set out to implement 294 initiatives after extensive public participation. I am pleased to announce that as of May 2016, we have already implemented 97% of those. We have achieved this with more than 13 months left until the deadline for completion which is June 2017. I would like to congratulate every single employee for this outstanding achievement. It showcases our commitment to being a responsive government and one which works tirelessly to deliver on the commitments it made to the people it serves. This is the hallmark of a Caring and Well-Run City. The SDBIP gives us the opportunity to promote a purpose and results driven culture within our organisation. This enables us to see our challenges as opportunities, to implement new methodologies, and to refine our service delivery strategy. -
Young, Gifted and Black ∗
Young, Gifted and Black ∗ Oral Histories of Young Activists in Cape Town and Durban in the early 1970s By Carmel T. M. Chetty Student No. 202520212 In partial completion of Master of Education Degree ∗ Acknowledgement to Nina Simone’s song that was very inspirational during this period: (W. Irvine/N. Simone) Ivan Mogull Music Ltd. EMI Tunes Pic. 1 This dissertation is dedicated to Krishna Rabilal, who was murdered on 30 January 1981 in, Matola, Mozambique by the South African Defence Force. We honour his heroism and memory through recording the stories of some of his contemporaries. It is solely by risking life that freedom is obtained… the individual who has not staked his life may, no doubt, be recognised as a person; but he has not attained the truth of this recognition as an independent self-consciousness. (Hegel: The Phenomenology of the Mind) 2 Declaration of Originality I, Carmel T. M. Chetty (Student No.: 202520212), declare that this research titled: Young, Gifted and Black. Oral Histories of Young Activists in Cape Town and Durban in the early 1970s is my own work and that all sources quoted have been duly acknowledged. This research was duly given ethical clearance by the Department of Humanities in 2005. Signed:_______________________________ Date:_________________________________ Supervisor: Crispin Hemson Co-Supervisor: Dennis Francis 3 Acknowledgements I wish to express my indebtedness to: − All the respondents in this study for their trust and courage in speaking to me about their early lives and revolutionary activities during the period which has been incorrectly described as ‘The Fifteen Year Night After Sharpeville’1 I wish to also express my heartfelt gratitude to those who had to relive the trauma of arrests, detentions, security police tortures and almost death. -
AC097 FA Cape Town City Map.Indd
MAMRE 0 1 2 3 4 5 10 km PELLA ATLANTIS WITSAND R27 PHILADELPHIA R302 R304 KOEBERG R304 I CAME FOR DUYNEFONTEIN MAP R45 BEAUTIFULR312 M19 N7 MELKBOSSTRAND R44 LANDSCAPES,PAARL M14 R304 R302 R27 M58 AND I FOUND Blaauwberg BEAUTIFULN1 PEOPLE Big Bay BLOUBERGSTRAND M48 B6 ROBBEN ISLAND PARKLANDS R302 KLAPMUTS TABLE VIEW M13 JOOSTENBERG KILLARNEY DURBANVILLE VLAKTE City Centre GARDENS KRAAIFONTEIN N1 R44 Atlantic Seaboard Northern Suburbs SONSTRAAL M5 N7 Table Bay Sunset Beach R304 Peninsula R27 BOTHASIG KENRIDGE R101 M14 PLATTEKLOOF M15 Southern Suburbs M25 EDGEMEAD TYGER VALLEY MILNERTON SCOTTSDENE M16 M23 Cape Flats M8 BRACKENFELL Milnerton Lagoon N1 Mouille Point Granger Bay M5 Helderberg GREEN POINT ACACIA M25 BELLVILLE B6 WATERFRONT PARK GOODWOOD R304 Three Anchor Bay N1 R102 CAPE TOWN M7 PAROW M23 Northern Suburbs STADIUM PAARDEN KAYAMANDI SEA POINT EILAND R102 M12 MAITLAND RAVENSMEAD Blaauwberg Bantry Bay SALT RIVER M16 M16 ELSIESRIVIER CLIFTON OBSERVATORY M17 EPPING M10 City Centre KUILS RIVER STELLENBOSCH Clifton Bay LANGA INDUSTRIA M52 Cape Town Tourism RHODES R102 CAMPS BAY MEMORIAL BONTEHEUWEL MODDERDAM Visitor Information Centres MOWBRAY N2 R300 M62 B6 CABLE WAY ATHLONE BISHOP LAVIS M12 M12 M3 STADIUM CAPE TOWN TABLE MOUNTAIN M5 M22 INTERNATIONAL Police Station TABLE RONDEBOSCH ATHLONE AIRPORT BAKOVEN MOUNTAIN NATIONAL BELGRAVIA Koeël Bay PARK B6 NEWLANDS RYLANDS Hospital M4 CLAREMONT GUGULETU DELFT KIRSTENBOSCH M54 R310 Atlantic Seaboard BLUE DOWNS JAMESTOWN B6 Cape Town’s Big 6 M24 HANOVER NYANGA Oude Kraal KENILWORTH PARK -
Directory of Organisations and Resources for People with Disabilities in South Africa
DISABILITY ALL SORTS A DIRECTORY OF ORGANISATIONS AND RESOURCES FOR PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES IN SOUTH AFRICA University of South Africa CONTENTS FOREWORD ADVOCACY — ALL DISABILITIES ADVOCACY — DISABILITY-SPECIFIC ACCOMMODATION (SUGGESTIONS FOR WORK AND EDUCATION) AIRLINES THAT ACCOMMODATE WHEELCHAIRS ARTS ASSISTANCE AND THERAPY DOGS ASSISTIVE DEVICES FOR HIRE ASSISTIVE DEVICES FOR PURCHASE ASSISTIVE DEVICES — MAIL ORDER ASSISTIVE DEVICES — REPAIRS ASSISTIVE DEVICES — RESOURCE AND INFORMATION CENTRE BACK SUPPORT BOOKS, DISABILITY GUIDES AND INFORMATION RESOURCES BRAILLE AND AUDIO PRODUCTION BREATHING SUPPORT BUILDING OF RAMPS BURSARIES CAREGIVERS AND NURSES CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — EASTERN CAPE CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — FREE STATE CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — GAUTENG CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — KWAZULU-NATAL CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — LIMPOPO CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — MPUMALANGA CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — NORTHERN CAPE CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — NORTH WEST CAREGIVERS AND NURSES — WESTERN CAPE CHARITY/GIFT SHOPS COMMUNITY SERVICE ORGANISATIONS COMPENSATION FOR WORKPLACE INJURIES COMPLEMENTARY THERAPIES CONVERSION OF VEHICLES COUNSELLING CRÈCHES DAY CARE CENTRES — EASTERN CAPE DAY CARE CENTRES — FREE STATE 1 DAY CARE CENTRES — GAUTENG DAY CARE CENTRES — KWAZULU-NATAL DAY CARE CENTRES — LIMPOPO DAY CARE CENTRES — MPUMALANGA DAY CARE CENTRES — WESTERN CAPE DISABILITY EQUITY CONSULTANTS DISABILITY MAGAZINES AND NEWSLETTERS DISABILITY MANAGEMENT DISABILITY SENSITISATION PROJECTS DISABILITY STUDIES DRIVING SCHOOLS E-LEARNING END-OF-LIFE DETERMINATION ENTREPRENEURIAL -
CPT City of Cape Town SDBIP 2014 2015
2014 – 2015 SERVICE DELIVERY AND BUDGET IMPLEMENTATION PLAN The Service Delivery and Budget Implementation Plan for the City of Cape Town 2014/2015 MESSAGE FROM THE EXECUTIVE MAYOR We have undertaken an ambitious programme of governance in the city. That programme has been to turn the five pillars into a development programme until 2016. Those pillars are: the opportunity city; the safe city; the caring city; the inclusive city; and the well-run city. I think we have achieved a great deal. The IDP maps out our goals, plans and ambitions for the remainder of this term, which is already well under way. I believe that we have achieved something quite unique in local government in South Africa and what national legislation actually intended: the complete alignment of democratic will into a programme of government. But having put in place this great plan, we need to know that it is working. We need to see the outcomes that we are delivering to the people, for their own benefit and for our own progress reports. These outcomes must be assessed by a monitoring and evaluation framework that can help flag our priority areas and provide baselines and targets against which we measure our performance. That means having a scorecard that we can monitor, a scorecard that becomes the living document of delivery. We do operate with certain realities. The Auditor- General requires strict monitoring of things that are measurable in order to determine compliance and sound government. We support those principles but in as much as we satisfy the Auditor General, we must satisfy our own purposes too. -
City of Cape Town Profile
2 PROFILE: CITY OF CAPETOWN PROFILE: CITY OF CAPETOWN 3 Contents 1. Executive Summary ........................................................................................... 4 2. Introduction: Brief Overview ............................................................................. 8 2.1 Location ................................................................................................................................. 8 2.2 Historical Perspective ............................................................................................................ 9 2.3 Spatial Status ....................................................................................................................... 11 3. Social Development Profile ............................................................................. 12 3.1 Key Social Demographics ..................................................................................................... 12 3.1.1 Population ............................................................................................................................ 12 3.1.2 Gender Age and Race ........................................................................................................... 13 3.1.3 Households ........................................................................................................................... 14 3.2 Health Profile ....................................................................................................................... 15 3.3 COVID-19 ............................................................................................................................ -
2011 Census Suburb Bloubergstrand July 2013
City of Cape Town – 2011 Census Suburb Bloubergstrand July 2013 Compiled by Strategic Development Information and GIS Department (SDI&GIS), City of Cape Town 2011 Census data supplied by Statistics South Africa (Based on information available at the time of compilation as released by Statistics South Africa) The 2011 Census suburbs (190) have been created by SDI&GIS grouping the 2011 Census sub-places using GIS and December 2011 aerial photography. A sub-place is defined by Statistics South Africa “is the second (lowest) level of the place name category, namely a suburb, section or zone of an (apartheid) township, smallholdings, village, sub- village, ward or informal settlement.” Suburb Overview, Demographic Profile, Economic Profile, Dwelling Profile, Household Services Profile 2011 Census Suburb Description 2011 Census suburb Bloubergstrand includes the following sub-places: Big Bay, Blouberg Sands, Bloubergstrand, West Beach. 1 Data Notes: The following databases from Statistics South Africa (SSA) software were used to extract the data for the profiles: Demographic Profile – Descriptive and Education databases Economic Profile – Labour Force and Head of Household databases Dwelling Profile – Dwellings database Household Services Profile – Household Services database In some Census suburbs there may be no data for households, or a very low number, as the Census suburb has population mainly living in collective living quarters (e.g. hotels, hostels, students’ residences, hospitals, prisons and other institutions) or is an industrial or commercial area. In these instances the number of households is not applicable. All tables have the data included, even if at times they are “0”, for completeness. The tables relating to population, age and labour force indicators would include the population living in these collective living quarters.