College of Law and Management Studies
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Item Natal's labour resources and industry in greater Durban.(1959) Burrows, John Raymond.; Burrows, John Raymond.; Horwood, Owen P. F.No abstract available.Item A socio-economic survey of the Indian community in the Tongaat-Verulam region.(1966) Maasdorp, Gavin Grant.; Horwood, Owen P. F.No abstract available.Item Studies in South African legal sources, constitutional law, the administration of justice and the conflict of laws.(1971) Kahn, Ellison.;No abstract provided.Item The association system of the European Economic Community and its impact on international trade policies.(1974) Matthews, Jacqueline Désirée.; van Waasdijk, T.; Trotter, George Jameson.No abstract.Item The migrant labour system and South African economic development 1936-1970.(1976) Nattrass, Jill.; Trotter, George Jameson.No abstract available.Item The Law of privacy in South Africa.(1977) McQuoid-Mason, David Jan.; Lund, James Robert.No abstract available.Item The concept of nuisance in English law : a study of the origins and historical development of the concept of nuisance from its earliest beginnings to the end of the nineteenth century(1978) Milton, John Robert Landrey.Abstract not availableItem The applicability of the law of war in internal conflict : a selective study of the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and additional protocols of 1977.(1980) Borrowdale, Andrew.No abstract available.Item The concept of family courts in South Africa.(1981) Schafer, Ivan Derrick.; Olmesdahl, Michael C. J.No abstract available.Item Item The legal consequences of artificial insemination and embryo transplantation in humans.(1982) Lupton, Michael Leslie.No abstract provided.Item South Africa and the consociational option : a constitutional analysis.(1982) Boulle, Laurence Joseph.; Mathews, Antony Stuart.No abstract available.Item Expropriation and the social contract with reference to the relation between citizens and their property.(1983) Erasmus, Gavin Mark.; Mathews, Antony Stuart.; Boulle, Laurence Joseph.No abstract available.Item An investigation into the adequacy of retail facilities in Chatsworth in view of modern retailing trends.(1984) Poovalingam, Kasthuri.; Buijis, J.No abstract available.Item Die administrasie van die Universiteit van Durban- Westville.(1984) Bezuidenhout, Dawid Petrus.; Coetzee, W. A. J.No abstract available.Item A comparative analysis of the Bophuthatswana bill of rights from an international law perspective.(1984) Naidu, Arjuna.; Soni, Ramanlal.It is difficult to define "human rights". Is it a political or a legal concept? Notwithstanding this difficulty which is primarily academic, Bophuthatswana has been able to entrench and enforce a justiciable Bill of Rights which is embodied in its Constitution. In Part One there is a general discussion on the concept of human rights together with a general overview of the events leading up to the independence of Bophuthatswana. The nature of the Bophuthatswana Constitution is analysed. The provisions of the Bill of Rights are enumerated and there follows a detailed discussion and analysis of all judicial decisions in which the Bill of Rights was in issue. The general theme of this thesis is to compare the Bophuthatswana Bill of Rights with other instruments, whether national, regional or international. Part Two, therefore looks at the protection of human rights in certain selected countries. These particular countries have been chosen because their Constitutions contain Bills of Rights. Part Two also examines in great detail the judicial protection of the rights guaranteed in each of these countries. For the sake of completeness, Part two concludes with a resume of the position of human rights in each of the other independent international states (that is, Transkei, Ciskei and Venda). Part Three considers the role of regional organisations and regional conventions on human rights of which the most effective is the European Convention. Part Four surveys the international protection of human rights, particularly the United Nations and the many conventions initiated by that body. Part Five comprehensively considers each human right enumerated in the Bill of Rights in a systematic and comparative manner with similar provisions in other national, regional and international instruments. In order that there might be some conception of the kinds of violations involved, decided cases under the European Convention are exhaustively referred to. Part Six concludes this thesis with a brief look at some other important rights (in the author's view) that are excluded from the Bill; and also a discussion on the future trends in Bophuthatswana with regard to the promotion and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms.Item Codification: its evolution, obstacles and achievements; and its value in South Africa.(1984) Farran, Susan Elizabeth.; Milton, John Robert Landrey.; Baxter, Lawrence Gerald.No abstract provided.Item Training of Indian teachers in Natal with special reference to selection procedures for admission to teacher training institutions and the financing of these institutions : an administrative perspective.(1985) Gounden, Thavarajh.; Coetzee, W. A. J.It is the objective of this dissertation to highlight the legislative and administrative aspects of teacher training for Indians in Natal. However, because the field which could be covered was so extensive, it was decided to focus attention primarily on those aspects pertinent to teacher training for Indians in Natal. Attention by way of example is invited to the following fields which had to be explored as they serve as the basis for teacher training of Indians in Natal: 1) A synopsis of the history of teacher training with special reference to recent developments. In this regard the survey inter alia, reveals that teacher training gained momentum during the last few decades. Prior to that, commencing from the close of the last century, the problem of an adequate corps of qualified teachers arose mainly as a result of historical circumstances. It was only during the 1950's that the Department responsible for Indian Education made concerted efforts to tackle the Indian teacher training problem in all seriousness. Thus, for almost six decades little was done to alleviate teacher training facilities for Natal's Indian community. 2) An overview of the basic legislation for teacher training in the South African context. The rapid growth of the South African population and to a lesser extent the effects of the Second World War prompted the South African Government to introduce numerous legislative and administrative measures to meet the teacher training needs of prospective students. National legislation presently places most of the responsibility for providing adequate teacher training facilities for the different population groups on the shoulders of the different education departments. 3) An overview of the financing of teacher training institutions and trainee teachers with special reference to the Springfield College of Education. It is the responsibility of the Central Government to fund education. Since the financial means of the Government are limited, it is not possible presently to provide all the population groups with adequate facilities for teacher training. A larger percentage of the national budget will have to be spent on teacher training than at present. Incentives, such as, inter alia, bursaries, are awarded to successful candidates for teacher training. On the financing of the tertiary educational sector, the Universities advisory council has completed an investigation into a revised subsidy formula for universities. A subsidy formula for technikons has been designed and will be adapted to the basic formula for universities. 4) A description of the administrative framework and basis for selecting prospective students for admission to teacher training institutions. No other single factor is as decisive in determining the quality of education in a country as the quality of the corps of teachers, lecturers and instructors. The recruitment and selection methods employed by the Department of Education and Culture (House of Delegates) are comparable to those employed by other education departments in South Africa. Since supply exceeds demand in the case of the number of applicants for teacher training in the Indian education department, applicants are carefully screened and the best are obviously selected. 5) An overview of teacher training and practice in essence with special reference to the University of Durban-Westville. Teaching practice forms an integral part in the moulding of a prospective student for teaching. Teaching practice is basically in two forms, that is, school-based and campus- based. A detailed study of the teaching practice programme implemented by the University of Durban-Westville indicates that students are subjected to almost all aspects of a teacher's normal work. Furthermore, if students are successful in following all aspects of teacher training as offered, the possibility exists, that they could be successful teachers The following recommendations are, inter alia, made, viz. that - i) an investigation into a more cost-beneficial system of financing of the tertiary education sector be undertaken; ii) a broad model for recruitment and selection of trainee teachers be drawn up by the Education Authorities; iii) facilities for continued education be carefully planned in terms of accessibility; and iv) that training institutions be geographically and demographically well placed.Item Interviewing in public personnel administration.(1985) Penceliah, Yoganandee.; Coetzee, W. A. J.No abstract available.Item Mediation arbitration : a better way to justice.(1985) Macnab, David Scott.; Newman, Ellie.No abstract available.