Southern African Region Leading the Way in Election Technology: 2009–2019 Review of Global Standards and Unanswered Questions

2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
John Maphephe ◽  
Rishidaw Balkaran ◽  
Surendra Thakur

This article presents essential tools that can help to devise a standard set of requirements and attributes for any form of electoral technology adopted across the continent. A number of countries in the southern African region have turned to a variety of technological solutions in a bid to make elections more efficient and cost-effective and to strengthen stakeholder trust at each stage of the electoral cycle. Africa has become a testing ground for technological leapfrogging. Election management bodies and Southern African Development Community observer teams are in the spotlight, but this leaves more questions about electoral capacity – problems that sometimes extend to the top of the African Union, which means that the African Union should adopt an incremental technological approach when dealing with electoral observations, capacity-building and political problem-solving across the whole continent. However, in many cases, the technology does not necessarily improve trust in the process or deal with the all problems with elections it was intended to resolve. As a result, concerns about the sustainability of electoral technology remain unanswered. The information for this study was gathered from an online search of secondary academic literature on electoral system management, published reports, legal mandates and official websites of the election management bodies studied. The lessons of the past decade show that technology has great potential for strengthening electoral integrity, but its introduction and use must be grounded in well-designed policies, surrounded by adequate safeguards and supported by legislation that is adequate to deal with the issues that it raises. The article attempts to assess emerging trends and to speculate on how they may affect the electoral process over the next decade. There is a need to examine how recent technological advancements could contribute further to enhancing electoral integrity and participation and how they can be integrated into the process in a sustainable manner.

2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 154-157 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lloyd D. Christopher ◽  
Navindhra Naidoo ◽  
Benjamin de Waal ◽  
Tiroyaone S. Mampane ◽  
Kelebogile Kgosibodiba ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-38
Author(s):  
Daniel Soares Fernandes ◽  
George Joseph

Chinese enterprises are presently dominating various sectors of businesses abroad, offering a wide range of low to high-end quality products and services. The construction sector in Africa is now being dominated by Chinese multinational contractor companies, who find in Africa their next preferable market to grow. The available literature on the field has serious gaps in explaining which organisational strategies increase the competitive advantage and the market dominance of Chinese multinational contractors, especially in the Southern African region. This research aims to uncover the organisational strategies, implemented by Chinese multinational contractors operating in the Southern African region, who have paved the way and consolidated their success in the region. Through a mixed methods process, qualitative and quantitative data are obtained. The construction markets of the Southern African region are analysed (environmental analysis) and the main multinational Chinese contractors are identified, through a literature review and organisational analysis. Several organisational strategies are shortlisted and, finally, through an online questionnaire, the opinions of the participants to rank the organisational strategies previously identified in terms of contribution to the actual success, copying capability, etc., are carried out. The findings revealed that the capability to offer a lower price for construction services, the easy access to loans and funds from the organisation's home government and the capability to trade debt for local resources, such as wood, land and minerals are the organisational strategies that mostly contributed to the recent Chinese contractor dominance in the Southern African construction market.


CNS Spectrums ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 307-312 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Randolph

ABSTRACTNeuropsychological (NP) test batteries have evolved as an amalgam of intelligence tests, various individual measures of “biological” cognition, and sensory and motor testing. The early emphasis of NP testing was to identify “organicity” and central nervous system lesion localization. More recent approaches have emphasized the profiling of performance across individual neurocognitive domains (eg, attention, memory, and language) to facilitate diagnosis and treatment planning. However, the field is still hampered by the use of many tests that are antiquated, excessively long, or of dubious psychometric quality. Some of these problems may have contributed to the current under-utilization of NP testing in diagnostic workups of neuropsychiatric disorders. This paper reviews some of the recent changes in the field that hold promise for substantially shortening assessments, improving diagnostic reliability, and making NP testing more cost-effective and practical.


2001 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
pp. 513-524 ◽  
Author(s):  
BERHANU FANTA ◽  
B. T. ZAAKE ◽  
R. K. KACHROO

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