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CSIR contributes to UNDP South Africa Human Development Report 2003 CSIR assists the Construction Industry Development Board in preparing the Construction Industry Status ReportRural community celebrates handover of road Exploring new school designs for Limpopo province Second edition of structural steel design guide now available Update on CSIR's Forensic Fire Investigation Programme International conference set to boost development of sustainable built environment in Africa E N Q U I R I E S |
CSIR Building and Construction Technology researchers Geci Karuri, Lucy Chege and Dennis Macozoma (now of the National Department of Transport) contributed to the recently-published United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) South Africa Human Development Report 2003. The report identifies and analyses five challenges facing sustainable development in South Africa:
It shows how these challenges are strongly inter-related and identifies underlying trends and policies that have contributed to weak and uneven development outcomes. As a result, the Human Development Index has worsened (from 0.73 in 1994 to 0.67 in 2003), poverty still engulfs 48.5% of the population (21.9 million in 2002), income inequality has increased (from 0.60 in 1995 to 0.63 in 2001), the majority of households have limited access to basic services, and the official unemployment rate has sharply increased to more than 30% in 2003. The report offers a strategy and suggests a policy re-orientation to meet South Africa's sustainable development challenges. This includes:
The report argues that these policy changes depend on strategic political interventions that focus policies and support measures on achieving the goals of sustainable development. It also emphasises the importance of engendering processes that are inclusive, transparent and democratic, and that empower the poorest sections of the population. CSIR Boutek's contributions were focused on the aspect of social services and infrastructure delivery. The chapter concludes with a proposition that addressing the challenges and achieving sustainability in service delivery relies on the powers and capabilities of the various stakeholders. Download the following documents:
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