Notices to be placed before 4:00 PM
Centre for Civil Society Seminar: FROM BLACKEST NIGHT TO BRIGHTEST DAY
Print
Centre for Civil Society Seminar: From blackest night to brightest day: Making youth aspirations of economic emancipation a reality by calling in the unpaid debts of the slave apprenticeship era
 
Speaker: Gerard Boyce
Date: Thursday, 28 June 2018
Time: 13h00-14h00
Venue: CCS Seminar Room A726, Level 7, Shepstone, Howard College, UKZN
 
Topic:
 
June is officially ‘Youth Month’ and so provides occasion for sundry commentators and analysts to lament the situation of young people and speculate upon the dire consequences which their impoverishment holds for future social stability. Likewise, politicians usually choose this time to announce their plans on how best society could alleviate their plight. In this spirit, in this presentation a proposal that could potentially address a range of problems which beset young people including poverty, inequality, unemployment and perceived frustration and despair caused by lack of economic opportunities will be put forward. Specifically, it will be argued that the conditional manner in which slaves were emancipated at the Cape in 1834 raised the obligation on the state to ensure that members of formerly oppressed groups are integrated into the economic mainstream. This obligation will be used as the basis upon which to motivate for the award of a four-year stipend to black young people. After describing the programme, potential difficulties will be identified and discussed. The presentation will conclude with final thoughts on how lessons drawn from one of the darkest chapters in our history could be used to illuminate the economic futures of young people and all South Africans.
 
Speaker Bio: 
 
Gerard Boyce is an economist who holds a PhD in the area of Behavioral Economics. He is currently employed as a Senior Lecturer in the School of Built Environment and Development Studies at the University of KwaZulu-Natal. He harbours a wide variety of professional interests, ranging from the effect of psychosocial variables such as hope and perceptions of racial hierarchy on economic attitudes to the inter-relationship between environmental factors and outlook/future orientation.

Notice Details
Category Events
Posted 21 June 2018
By Shashnie Melanie Reddy
Tel
From UKZN
Audience
Howard College Staff  Howard College Students 
Edgewood Staff  EdgWood Students 
Medical School Staff  Medical School Students 
PMB Staff  PMB Students 
Westville Staff  Westville Students 
  •  
  • F.A.Q.
  •  
  • Quick Help
  •  
F.A.Q. (frequently asked questions)

Please use Firefox or IE to upload your notice.

Will I still be able to read my Notices from within my email?

In a manner of speaking yes. However you will not get the entire notice delivered to you in your email, instead you will get a daily digest which will list the subject of the notices, a short summary of each notice and hyperlinks that will take you to that notice on the web.

2. Who has access to notices?


Anybody can access the notice system, however you will not be able to place notices from off-campus.