Mashudu masutha biography definition
•
Browsing by Issue Date
Partially resistant avocado rootstock Dusa(R) shows prolonged upregulation of nucleotide binding-Leucine rich repeat genes in response to Phytophthora cinnamomi infection
Fick, Alicia; Swart, Velushka; Backer, Robert; Bombarely, Aureliano; Engelbrecht, Juanita; Van den Berg, Noelani(Frontiers Media S.A., 2022-03-11)
Avocado is an important agricultural food crop in many countries worldwide. Phytophthora cinnamomi, a hemibiotrophic oomycete, remains one of the most devastating pathogens within the avocado industry, as it is near ...
Online theological education within the South African context
Knoetze, Johannes Jacobus(AOSIS, 2022-03-09)
This article presents the results of an empirical research study conducted at the Faculty of Theology and Religion at the University of Pretoria on students' experiences of online theological education during the outbreak ...
Cryptocurrencies and tokens lifetime analysis from 2009 to 2021
G
•
Licensing
02
Getting tillgång to resources
Download the full chapter in PDF
Why it matters
Why does this matter to your audience?
- Deals in oil, gas and mining sectors are often worth billions of dollars and last for generations.
- Licensing processes usually take place in a country’s capital, before big utrustning or excavation would be noticed locally. That means the deal is often signed before the people who are going to be most impacted know what fryst vatten happening.
- Licensing fryst vatten the process of deciding which company gets the extractive deal, and the terms of that deal. It fryst vatten the moment in the cycle of an extractive process with the highest risk of corruption. Corruption in making the deal means a country could be tied to a bad deal or a bad actor for decades. This increases the fara of lower revenues, fewer employment opportunities, fewer links with local businesses, and greater social and environmental impact.
- Potential losses are huge. The Democratic Rep
•
Venda people
Ethnic group in South Africa and Zimbabwe
Not to be confused with the Vedda people.
Ethnic group
The Venḓa (VhaVenḓa or Vhangona) are a Bantu people native to Southern Africa living mostly near the South African-Zimbabwean border. The Venda language arose from interactions with Sotho-Tswana and Kalanga groups from 1400.[4]
The Venda are closely associated with the 13th century Kingdom of Mapungubwe where oral tradition holds King Shiriyadenga as the first king of Venda and Mapungubwe.[5] The Mapungubwe Kingdom stretched from the Soutpansberg in the south, across the Limpopo River to the Matopos in the north. The Kingdom rapidly declined around 1300 due to climatic change and the population scattered, as power moved north to the Great Zimbabwe Kingdom. The first Venda settlement in the Soutpansberg was that of the legendary chief Thoho-ya-Ndou (Head of the Elephant). His royal kraal was called D’zata; its remains have been declared a National