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Eff Statement on Second National Peoples Assembly, Parliament Deployments and Other Political Issues
EFF STATEMENT ON SECOND NATIONAL PEOPLES ASSEMBLY, PARLIAMENT DEPLOYMENTS AND OTHER POLITICAL ISSUES Tuesday, 02 July, 2019 NATIONAL PEOPLE’S ASSEMBLY At its Special Meeting convened on the 1st of July, 2019, the Central Command Team resolved that the EFF Second National People’s Assembly will be convened on the 13 - 16 December, 2019 at the Expo Centre, Nasrec under the theme “Consolidating the Ground Towards Socialist Power”. The National People’s Assembly is an elective conference of the EFF, the highest decision-making body and, according to the EFF Constitution, takes place every five years. Accordingly, the CCT has adopted guidelines that pave the path towards the election of delegates from branches, including in regions, and provinces. These will be published on the EFF website for easy access. Within these guidelines are strict rules and deadlines for election of delegates, audit of branches, as well as conduct of all fighters and commissars on lobbying for leadership positions. Members and leaders of the EFF are therefore called upon to internalise these guidelines and participate in the lead up to this assembly with the highest discipline and determination. The Discussion Documents will also be published on the EFF website and they will be sent to branches, so that branches are not only ceased with matters of leadership but they also discuss the state of the nation in South Africa through the Discussion Documents of the EFF and provide what could be a sustainable solution to the challenges that are confronting the poor masses of our people on the ground. PARLIAMENT COMMITTEE DEPLOYMENTS Post 2019 General Elections, the EFF increased its seats from 31 to 53 Members of Parliament (MPs), with 44 in the National Assembly (NA) and 9 in the National Council of Provinces (NCOP). -
"National List of Vascular Plant Species That Occur in Wetlands: 1996 National Summary."
Intro 1996 National List of Vascular Plant Species That Occur in Wetlands The Fish and Wildlife Service has prepared a National List of Vascular Plant Species That Occur in Wetlands: 1996 National Summary (1996 National List). The 1996 National List is a draft revision of the National List of Plant Species That Occur in Wetlands: 1988 National Summary (Reed 1988) (1988 National List). The 1996 National List is provided to encourage additional public review and comments on the draft regional wetland indicator assignments. The 1996 National List reflects a significant amount of new information that has become available since 1988 on the wetland affinity of vascular plants. This new information has resulted from the extensive use of the 1988 National List in the field by individuals involved in wetland and other resource inventories, wetland identification and delineation, and wetland research. Interim Regional Interagency Review Panel (Regional Panel) changes in indicator status as well as additions and deletions to the 1988 National List were documented in Regional supplements. The National List was originally developed as an appendix to the Classification of Wetlands and Deepwater Habitats of the United States (Cowardin et al.1979) to aid in the consistent application of this classification system for wetlands in the field.. The 1996 National List also was developed to aid in determining the presence of hydrophytic vegetation in the Clean Water Act Section 404 wetland regulatory program and in the implementation of the swampbuster provisions of the Food Security Act. While not required by law or regulation, the Fish and Wildlife Service is making the 1996 National List available for review and comment. -
National List of Vascular Plant Species That Occur in Wetlands 1996
National List of Vascular Plant Species that Occur in Wetlands: 1996 National Summary Indicator by Region and Subregion Scientific Name/ North North Central South Inter- National Subregion Northeast Southeast Central Plains Plains Plains Southwest mountain Northwest California Alaska Caribbean Hawaii Indicator Range Abies amabilis (Dougl. ex Loud.) Dougl. ex Forbes FACU FACU UPL UPL,FACU Abies balsamea (L.) P. Mill. FAC FACW FAC,FACW Abies concolor (Gord. & Glend.) Lindl. ex Hildebr. NI NI NI NI NI UPL UPL Abies fraseri (Pursh) Poir. FACU FACU FACU Abies grandis (Dougl. ex D. Don) Lindl. FACU-* NI FACU-* Abies lasiocarpa (Hook.) Nutt. NI NI FACU+ FACU- FACU FAC UPL UPL,FAC Abies magnifica A. Murr. NI UPL NI FACU UPL,FACU Abildgaardia ovata (Burm. f.) Kral FACW+ FAC+ FAC+,FACW+ Abutilon theophrasti Medik. UPL FACU- FACU- UPL UPL UPL UPL UPL NI NI UPL,FACU- Acacia choriophylla Benth. FAC* FAC* Acacia farnesiana (L.) Willd. FACU NI NI* NI NI FACU Acacia greggii Gray UPL UPL FACU FACU UPL,FACU Acacia macracantha Humb. & Bonpl. ex Willd. NI FAC FAC Acacia minuta ssp. minuta (M.E. Jones) Beauchamp FACU FACU Acaena exigua Gray OBL OBL Acalypha bisetosa Bertol. ex Spreng. FACW FACW Acalypha virginica L. FACU- FACU- FAC- FACU- FACU- FACU* FACU-,FAC- Acalypha virginica var. rhomboidea (Raf.) Cooperrider FACU- FAC- FACU FACU- FACU- FACU* FACU-,FAC- Acanthocereus tetragonus (L.) Humm. FAC* NI NI FAC* Acanthomintha ilicifolia (Gray) Gray FAC* FAC* Acanthus ebracteatus Vahl OBL OBL Acer circinatum Pursh FAC- FAC NI FAC-,FAC Acer glabrum Torr. FAC FAC FAC FACU FACU* FAC FACU FACU*,FAC Acer grandidentatum Nutt. -
Gender and Forests
Copyright Material – Provided by Taylor & Francis Gender and Forests “The bold experimentation and collaborative learning conveyed in this volume trace an odyssey through which conversations around gender and forests CLIMATE CHANGE, TENURE, VALUE CHAINS AND moved from initial dismissive laughter to powerful research and practice ongoing Gender and across scales and contexts, scientific disciplines, and diverse ways of knowing and being.” EMERGING ISSUES —Susan Paulson, University of Florida, USA “This volume provides clear guidance, with a clear conceptual framework and case study applications. Although focusing on forestry, it is also relevant to others working on climate change, tenure, and value chains.” —Ruth Meinzen-Dick, International Food Policy Research Institute, USA “This excellent book provides hard and convincing evidence of the need for significant changes in the way that gender issues are dealt with by the forest sector and should be mandatory reading for all current and future forest professionals.” —John Innes, University of British Columbia, Canada “This accessible volume brings together a diverse set of authors and case studies that focus on gender as Forests an important dimension of all aspects of forest use and management. Chapters drawing on experiences from all the world’s regions are usefully connected through a conceptual framework (The Gender Box).” —Marianne Schmink, University of Florida, USA his enlightening book brings together the work of gender and forestry specialists from various backgrounds and fields of research and action to analyse global gender conditions as related to forests. Using a variety of Tmethods and approaches, they build on a spectrum of theoretical perspectives to bring depth and breadth to the relevant issues and address timely and under-studied themes. -
Pan-African Orogeny 1
Encyclopedia 0f Geology (2004), vol. 1, Elsevier, Amsterdam AFRICA/Pan-African Orogeny 1 Contents Pan-African Orogeny North African Phanerozoic Rift Valley Within the Pan-African domains, two broad types of Pan-African Orogeny orogenic or mobile belts can be distinguished. One type consists predominantly of Neoproterozoic supracrustal and magmatic assemblages, many of juvenile (mantle- A Kröner, Universität Mainz, Mainz, Germany R J Stern, University of Texas-Dallas, Richardson derived) origin, with structural and metamorphic his- TX, USA tories that are similar to those in Phanerozoic collision and accretion belts. These belts expose upper to middle O 2005, Elsevier Ltd. All Rights Reserved. crustal levels and contain diagnostic features such as ophiolites, subduction- or collision-related granitoids, lntroduction island-arc or passive continental margin assemblages as well as exotic terranes that permit reconstruction of The term 'Pan-African' was coined by WQ Kennedy in their evolution in Phanerozoic-style plate tectonic scen- 1964 on the basis of an assessment of available Rb-Sr arios. Such belts include the Arabian-Nubian shield of and K-Ar ages in Africa. The Pan-African was inter- Arabia and north-east Africa (Figure 2), the Damara- preted as a tectono-thermal event, some 500 Ma ago, Kaoko-Gariep Belt and Lufilian Arc of south-central during which a number of mobile belts formed, sur- and south-western Africa, the West Congo Belt of rounding older cratons. The concept was then extended Angola and Congo Republic, the Trans-Sahara Belt of to the Gondwana continents (Figure 1) although West Africa, and the Rokelide and Mauretanian belts regional names were proposed such as Brasiliano along the western Part of the West African Craton for South America, Adelaidean for Australia, and (Figure 1). -
Ancestral Reconstruction of Diet and Fang Condition in the Lamprophiidae: Implications for the Evolution of Venom Systems in Snakes
Journal of Herpetology, Vol. 55, No. 1, 1–10, 2021 Copyright 2021 Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles Ancestral Reconstruction of Diet and Fang Condition in the Lamprophiidae: Implications for the Evolution of Venom Systems in Snakes 1,2 1 1 HIRAL NAIK, MIMMIE M. KGADITSE, AND GRAHAM J. ALEXANDER 1School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. PO Wits, 2050, Gauteng, South Africa ABSTRACT.—The Colubroidea includes all venomous and some nonvenomous snakes, many of which have extraordinary dental morphology and functional capabilities. It has been proposed that the ancestral condition of the Colubroidea is venomous with tubular fangs. The venom system includes the production of venomous secretions by labial glands in the mouth and usually includes fangs for effective delivery of venom. Despite significant research on the evolution of the venom system in snakes, limited research exists on the driving forces for different fang and dental morphology at a broader phylogenetic scale. We assessed the patterns of fang and dental condition in the Lamprophiidae, a speciose family of advanced snakes within the Colubroidea, and we related fang and dental condition to diet. The Lamprophiidae is the only snake family that includes front-fanged, rear-fanged, and fangless species. We produced an ancestral reconstruction for the family and investigated the pattern of diet and fangs within the clade. We concluded that the ancestral lamprophiid was most likely rear-fanged and that the shift in dental morphology was associated with changes in diet. This pattern indicates that fang loss, and probably venom loss, has occurred multiple times within the Lamprophiidae. -
Nedbank Sani2c Combined
1 of 29 2015/09/07 09:17 Nedbank Sani2C Combined GC Results after Day 3 Trail, Adventure and Race Event GC Combined Cat Combined GC Event Cat Event Time Day1 Time Day2 Time Day3 Time GC Team# Team name Rider1 Rider2 Category Cat2 P_Cat2 Race 1 1 1 1 2:38:03 3:38:15 2:33:34 8:49:52 2634 Blend Darren Lill Waylon Woolcock Mens Team Race 2 2 2 2 2:40:09 3:36:37 2:34:01 8:50:47 2722 EAI Wheeler Johann Rabie Konny Looser Mens Team Race 3 3 3 3 2:40:10 3:44:29 2:35:17 8:59:56 2558 Team RECM Erik Kleinhans Nico Bell Mens Team Race 4 4 4 4 2:45:12 3:42:58 2:40:18 9:08:28 2741 Biogen Vulcan Max Knox Kevin Evans Mens Team Race 5 5 5 5 2:45:11 3:49:10 2:40:09 9:14:30 2745 The Gear Change David George Justin Tuck Mens Team Race 6 6 6 6 2:46:31 3:53:16 2:41:27 9:21:14 2645 Team TIB Andrew Hill Christopher Wolhuter Mens Team Race 7 7 7 7 2:47:14 3:58:17 2:40:57 9:26:28 2048 IXU Scott Van Den Berg Guylin Hendrik Kruger Mens Team Race 8 8 8 8 2:48:43 3:53:16 2:48:05 9:30:04 2192 CONTEGO Pro MTB Adriaan Louw Luke Evans Mens Team Race 9 9 9 9 2:53:39 3:59:47 2:41:26 9:34:52 2044 Jowetts / Roag Warren Price Matthew Wilkinson Mens Team Race 10 10 10 10 2:50:37 4:04:34 2:42:33 9:37:44 2371 Complete Cyclist Subvets Mike Hewan Franco Ferreira Mens Team Race 11 11 11 11 2:54:06 4:01:45 2:46:28 9:42:19 2372 william simpson Derrin Smith Michael Posthumus Mens Team Race 12 12 12 12 2:51:01 4:09:31 2:44:51 9:45:23 2718 SG100 Gordon Gilbert Alan Gordon Mens Team Race 13 13 13 13 2:57:11 4:07:56 2:51:20 9:56:27 2070 RMB Change a life Ndumiso Dontso Sipho Kupiso Mens -
Neoproterozoic Crustal Evolution in Southern Chad: Pan-African Ocean Basin Closing, Arc Accretion and Late- to Post-Orogenic Granitic Intrusion
Neoproterozoic crustal evolution in Southern Chad: Pan-African ocean basin closing, arc accretion and late- to post-orogenic granitic intrusion. André Pouclet, Max Vidal, J.C. Doumnang, Jean-Paul Vicat, Rigobert Tchameni To cite this version: André Pouclet, Max Vidal, J.C. Doumnang, Jean-Paul Vicat, Rigobert Tchameni. Neoproterozoic crustal evolution in Southern Chad: Pan-African ocean basin closing, arc accretion and late- to post-orogenic granitic intrusion.. Journal of African Earth Sciences, Elsevier, 2006, 44, pp.543-560. 10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2005.11.019. hal-00073651 HAL Id: hal-00073651 https://hal-insu.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00073651 Submitted on 30 May 2006 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Neoproterozoic crustal evolution in Southern Chad: Pan- African ocean basin closing, arc accretion and late- to post-orogenic granitic intrusion A. Poucleta, M. Vidala, J.-C. Doumnangb, J.-P. Vicata and R. Tchamenic aInstitut des Sciences de la Terre d’Orléans, UMR 6113, Université, B.P. 6759, 45067 Orléans Cedex 2, France bLaboratoire de Géologie, Faculté des Sciences, Université, B.P. 1027, N’Djamena, Tchad cDépartement des Sciences de la Terre, Faculté des Sciences, Université, B.P. -
HSRC Review December 2018 Fa.Pdf
ReviewPUBLICATION OF THE HUMAN SCIENCES RESEARCH COUNCIL VOL. 16 | NO. 4 | DECEMBER 2018 DIGITAL disruption - THE IMPACT SOCIAL INNOVATION – the need to consult YOUNG PEOPLE - TRANSITIONING OUT OF POVERTY Feature Article Editor’s note CONTENTS n a recent survey, we asked our readers what they thought the Deconstructing the Fourth Industrial HSRC Review should focus on. One Revolution: Defining the concept and 3 I respondent answered, “anything that research agenda reflects the extreme crisis through which we are living”. The future of research: Knowledge 5 production outside institutions Without more context, the concept of an ‘extreme crisis’ will differ among people in Understanding the risks and 7 an unequal society such as ours. However, opportunities of digital evolution by students at the University of Cape there seems to be growing angst among Town, explaining how they used media South Africans, caused by the slumping Tweeting #FeesMustFall: The case of houses and mobilised sympathisers they 9 economy, political uncertainty, fragile #UCTShutdown call ‘twitter cows’. social cohesion and, for many, a struggle Social innovation: Making a case for to keep up with the pace of the global In May this year, parliament heard that 12 participatory approaches digital revolution. 31% of South African municipalities were dysfunctional and another 31% almost In their presentations at the 2018 HSRC Who might engage in anti-immigrant dysfunctional. People in some poor Social Sciences Research Conference violence? A quantitative analysis of 14 communities have protested violently in September, HSRC researchers anti-immigrant aggression about the resultant deteriorating service demonstrated the organisation’s continued delivery, destroying infrastructure that they Low-skilled immigration and the South focus on things that have an impact on the 17 actually need to transition out of poverty. -
*Wagner Et Al. --Intro
NUMBER 60, 58 pages 15 September 1999 BISHOP MUSEUM OCCASIONAL PAPERS HAWAIIAN VASCULAR PLANTS AT RISK: 1999 WARREN L. WAGNER, MARIE M. BRUEGMANN, DERRAL M. HERBST, AND JOEL Q.C. LAU BISHOP MUSEUM PRESS HONOLULU Printed on recycled paper Cover illustration: Lobelia gloria-montis Rock, an endemic lobeliad from Maui. [From Wagner et al., 1990, Manual of flowering plants of Hawai‘i, pl. 57.] A SPECIAL PUBLICATION OF THE RECORDS OF THE HAWAII BIOLOGICAL SURVEY FOR 1998 Research publications of Bishop Museum are issued irregularly in the RESEARCH following active series: • Bishop Museum Occasional Papers. A series of short papers PUBLICATIONS OF describing original research in the natural and cultural sciences. Publications containing larger, monographic works are issued in BISHOP MUSEUM four areas: • Bishop Museum Bulletins in Anthropology • Bishop Museum Bulletins in Botany • Bishop Museum Bulletins in Entomology • Bishop Museum Bulletins in Zoology Numbering by volume of Occasional Papers ceased with volume 31. Each Occasional Paper now has its own individual number starting with Number 32. Each paper is separately paginated. The Museum also publishes Bishop Museum Technical Reports, a series containing information relative to scholarly research and collections activities. Issue is authorized by the Museum’s Scientific Publications Committee, but manuscripts do not necessarily receive peer review and are not intended as formal publications. Institutions and individuals may subscribe to any of the above or pur- chase separate publications from Bishop Museum Press, 1525 Bernice Street, Honolulu, Hawai‘i 96817-0916, USA. Phone: (808) 848-4135; fax: (808) 841-8968; email: [email protected]. Institutional libraries interested in exchanging publications should write to: Library Exchange Program, Bishop Museum Library, 1525 Bernice Street, Honolulu, Hawai‘i 96817-0916, USA; fax: (808) 848-4133; email: [email protected]. -
LIST of MEMBERS (Female)
As on 28 May 2021 LIST OF MEMBERS (Female) 6th Parliament CABINET OFFICE-BEARERS OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY MEMBERS OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY As on 28 May 2021 MEMBERS OF THE EXECUTIVE (alphabetical list) Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development ............. Ms A T Didiza Minister of Basic Education ....................................................... Mrs M A Motshekga Minister of Communications and Digital Technologies ....................... Ms S T Ndabeni-Abrahams Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs ............... Dr N C Dlamini-Zuma Minister of Defence and Military Veterans ..................................... Ms N N Mapisa-Nqakula Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and Environment ............................... Ms B D Creecy Minister of Human Settlements, Water and Sanitation ...................... Ms L N Sisulu Minister of International Relations and Cooperation ......................... Dr G N M Pandor Minister of Public Works and Infrastructure ................................... Ms P De Lille Minister of Small Business Development ....................................... Ms K P S Ntshavheni Minister of Social Development .................................................. Ms L D Zulu Minister of State Security ......................................................... Ms A Dlodlo Minister of Tourism ................................................................. Ms M T Kubayi-Ngubane Minister in The Presidency for Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities ..................................................................... -
Department of African Literature Masters Research Report
DEPARTMENT OF AFRICAN LITERATURE MASTERS RESEARCH REPORT Name: Simamkele Dlakavu Student Number: 475844 Asijiki: Black Women in the Economic Freedom Fighters, Owning Space, Building a Movement Supervisor: Dr Danai Mupotsa A thesis submitted in fulfilment of the partial requirements for the degree of Master of Arts at the University of the Witwatersrand. Department of African Literature March 2017 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Declaration…………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 3 Acknowledgements………………………………………………………………………………………………4 Abbreviations……………………………………………………………………………………………………….5 List of Tables and List of Figures………………………………………………………………………….6 1. Introduction and Theoretical Framework ………………………………………………………7 1.1. The Rise of the Economic Freedom Fighters: Context……………………………………………………………..16 1.2. Rationale……………………………………………………..……………………………………………………………………….18 1.3. Research Objectives……………………………………………………………………………………………………………...21 1.4. Theoretical Framework…………………………………………………………………………………………………..........21 2. Literature Review…………………………………………………………………………………… ….26 2.1. Black Women in Politics: A Fight for Belonging……………………………………………………………………...26 2.2. Black Women’s Political Legacies in South Africa: A Sight for Erasure & (Re)memory……………..30 2.3. The Status of Women in South Africa: Contemporary Dynamics……………………………………………..31 3. EFF Gender Policy Practice…………………………………………………………………………..34 3.1. Economic Freedom Fighters: Evaluating its Articulated Gender Discourse……………………………...34 3.2. “No male will replace a female”: The Economic Freedom Fighter’s Commitment