CSSR Organogram - Centre for Social Science Research
Transcription
CSSR Organogram - Centre for Social Science Research
CENTRE FOR SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH Promoting Evidence-based research and public policy SSU SUSTAINABLE SOCIETIES UNIT BEATRICE CONRADIE MARINE DROUILLY Beatrice is Director of the SSU. Her research investigates how agriculture functions in a broader society, in the presence of increasing regulation. A second strand of Beatrice’s research investigates how farmers respond to envi¬ronmental changes. A third element brings in a localised study of productivity growth to explain why some regions of the local farming economy are more successful than other parts. Marine is a French ecologist with a passion for Africa and Science. After working on predator projects on 4 continents, she returned to university to pursue her PhD in wildlife conservation and behavioural ecology. She is particularly interested in human-wildlife conflicts which she thinks are the biggest challenges wildlife conservationists will have to face in the 21st century. Adam is working as a journalist on GroundUp. He is covering the Khayelitsha Commission, an investigation into policing in Khayelitsha. Before this he has worked as a researcher for various organisations on different projects. He completed his Masters in Criminology at UCT in 2011. ADAM ARMSTRONG MIA GRANVIK Abigail’s current research focuses on the politics of welfare policy reform in Zambia. She is also interested in gender, conflict resolution, peace and security. ABIGAIL KABANDULA GABRIELLA KELLY Kezia is completing her Master’s degree in Applied Economics. She is particularly interested in development economics and her current area of research is youth unemployment in Cape Town. KEZIA LILENSTEIN SINGUMBE MUYEBA Singumbe’s interest is in institutions and the link between property rights, capital assets and development. Particularly, he works on the effects of government housing subsidies in Cape Town and the privatization of public housing in Lusaka (Zambia). He is also examining measures of institutional capital. Singumbe is further involved in examining the politics of social protection policies in Zambia. WESLEY MARAIRE ROBIN SMAILL Mia completed a BA in Sociology and Social Anthropology at the University of Basel, Switzerland, and then a MPhil in Development Studies at UCT in 2013. Since working with a Swedish development organisation in Kenya she has been working as a junior research officer on the ‘Legislating and Implementing Welfare Policy Reforms’ project at the CSSR, covering Lesotho and Swaziland. INGE CONRADIE SAM HAMER Gabriella’s research interests include socio-economic rights and justice issues and social protection policy and she is currently undertaking a PhD in Sociology at UCT, focusing on the South African Disability Grant. Her other interests include the Child Support Grant and worked as a research intern at the Alliance for Children’s Entitlement to Social Security in ADAIAH 2012. Wesley holds an Honours degree in Industrial Sociology and is completing a Masters in Labour Law at UCT. He was awarded a Scholarship in 2013 to complete a Working Paper surveying the attitudes held by workers in the clothing industry towards four key issues: tradeoff between regularly negotiated wage increases and job security; production incentive systems; informal homeworking; and cooperatives. Robin is completing a Master’s degree in Sociology at UCT with his dissertation testing Life History Theory (LHT) in the context of Cape Town. LHT understands human behaviour as an adaption to environmental circumstances, social and physical, so as to optimise biological outcomes. It would seem that the years of life before school are important in determining life strategy or a life path. Inge received a BA in Value and Policy Studies, majoring in Economics and Organisational Decision-Making, from Stellenbosch in 2012. Currently she is completing her Honours in Economics at the University of Cape Town, with her thesis on the topic: The Livelihoods and Lives of Agricultural Casual Workers in Laingsburg: Why do they ‘choose’ to stay. Sam commenced his work as a research assistant under Prof. Jeremy Seekings in February of 2014. He is currently researching projects whose subjects span a wide array of issues in the realms of welfare policy, politics, and economic development. He is a 2013 graduate of Yale University, where he majored in History, and hails from Chicago. JEREMY SEEKINGS ADMIN Thobani is part of the Cape Area Panel Study team. His primary responsibilities are monitoring and evaluation, fieldwork (face to face and telephonic interviews) and data cleaning. He assists with other research projects and CSSR office administration. Nondumiso currently holds a Diploma in Education and serves as the CSSR Senior Secretary and Receptionist. NONDUMISO HLWELE THERESA ALFAROVELCAMP ELIZABETH GUMMERSON Heide is Executive Director of the International Social Science Council (ISSC), based at UNESCO in Paris, France. She has a research background in science policy studies, the international governance of science, and research evaluation. HEIDE HACKMANN KEVIN CELESTE KRIEL Celeste is a PhD student in Economics at UCT, and a research associate at the CSSR. Her current work looks at the impact of antiretroviral therapy on labour force participation. Celeste is a deputy director of research in the provincial department of economic development and tourism. Previously she worked as a researcher for ASRU. THOPANI NCAPAI NICOLI NATTRASS SAMUEL TELZAK Collette holds a PhD in Politics from the University of Cape Town. She has previously worked at the Institute for Kevin’s research at the CSSR Security Studies, Idasa and focuses on the post-apartheid as an elections analyst for the history of social grants and their South African Broadcasting use of biometric identification. Corporation during elections. He is also a PhD student in Collette’s postdoctoral research examines the effects the Program in Anthropology of political intermediation & History at the University of on voter behaviour in two Michigan. African national and COLLETTE SCHULZ-South provincial elections using Comparative National DONOVAN HERZENBERG the Elections Project data series. Claudia and Dirk both hold PhDs in Social Development from UWC. Together they coordinated the Basic Income Grant (BIG) Coalition and the worldwide first BIG Pilot Project in Namibia. Their research interests are Economic security, social security, poverty, HIVAIDS, alternative economic DIRK models, participatory action research and micro-simulation. TAKWANISA MACHEMEDZE Shana is the Program Manager for Francophone Africa of the African Legislatures Project at UCT. She is a PhD student in comparative politics at New York University and also serves as a consultant, specialising in transparency, accountability and parliamentary development. SHANA WARREN Nicoli Nattrass is Director of ASRU. She works on: unemployment, AIDS and economic policy in South Africa; the politicaleconomy of the international antiretroviral treatment rollout; the social determinants of AIDS denialism and conspiracy theory and the challenges these pose for sexual behaviour and scientific medicine. Eduard holds a PhD from UCT on national and transnational AIDS activism focusing on South Africa and Uganda. Formerly, he worked for DataFirst. He is now a postdoctoral research fellow, working on welfare policymaking. He also also runs the CSSR’s website. He has a background in philosophy and retains a strong interest in political philosophy. Takwanisa is a PhD student whose research interests focus on sexual risk behavior and its determinants. Current research explores the possible influences of HIV/AIDS-related stigma on sexual risk behavior. Nathan is the editor of GroundUp and the author of Debunking Delusions. His research interests include the epidemiology of HIV and TB. DEMOCRACY IN AFRICA RESEARCH UNIT ROBERT MATTES NATHAN GEFFEN REBECCA HODES Rebecca is the principal investigator of the ‘Mzantsi Wakho’ study and author of Broadcasting the Pandemic: HIV on South African Television. Her D.Phil was in the History of Medicine, and her current historical research focuses on science, race and sex in South African history. She is a 2013 – 2014 fellow of the American Council of Learned Societies’ African Humanities Program. ANNABELLE WIENAND Annabelle is a doctoral student. Her thesis is focused on the different aesthetic, political and philosophical strategies used by contemporary South African photographers to represent the HIV epidemic. The dissertation is also concerned with the history of photography in Africa, the social and political history of HIV/AIDS in South Africa and the contexts where photographs are published. FaSRU FAMILY AND SOCIETY RESEARCH UNIT CLAUDIA & HAARMANN SHAHEEN MOZAFFAR DARU AIDS AND SOCIETY RESEARCH UNIT REBECCA MAUGHAN-BROWN Shaheen is a Professor of Political Science and Research Associate at the Centre of Legislative Studies, Bridgewater State University in Bridgewater, Massachusetts. His research focuses on the comparative analysis of electoral systems, party systems, legislatures, politics and ethnicity, and democracy in Islam emerging African democracies and elsewhere. Previously, Liz administered the Centre for the Study of African Economies (CSAE) at Oxford University and worked for various NGOs in economic and social development in southern Africa. Currently, Liz coordinates research on various CSSR projects including the African Legislatures Project (ALP) and Afrobarometer. A Licentiate of Trinity College, London (Clarinet Teacher’s Diploma) Liz plays in Windworx, Cape Town. ELIZABETH WELSH ASRU Rebecca is working on the Imitation Games project, examining race and social fluency. She has a Master’s Degree in Social Work and Public Health, from Tulane University. Previously, Rebecca directed the department of Student Health Education at Yale University. She currently works for Power-free Education and Technology, a Cape Town-based NGO. Samuel graduated from Yale University in May 2013 and is currently pursuing a Research Master’s on perceptions of social mobility and economic inequality with support from a Fox International Fellowship. ELENA MOORE PEDRO WOLF Pedro is a Senior Lecturer in the CSSR and Department of Psychology. His research interests include evolutionary psychology, and research methods. While working with the CSSR, he aims to expand the use of evolution as a metatheory in the broader social sciences and improve UCT’s methodological capabilities AMY KENNEDY ASSOCIATE RESEARCH FELLOWS Elizabeth has a PhD from Princeton and was a postdoctoral research fellow in the CSSR from 2012-2013. She is now back in the USA but continues to work on CSSR projects, including research on pverty, health and inequality. Rajen is a Senior Research Fellow for the CSSR, a Sociology Professor and is also based at the UCT Graduate School of Development Policy and Practice. He holds a PhD from UCLA. His interests include performance measurement in the health sector, specifically developing and validating process and outcome measures in substance abuse treatment programmes, examining clinical co-morbidity in People Living with HIV/AIDS and investigating the impact of substance abuse on adherence to ARV regimens. Amy is the Working Paper editor for the CSSR. She is currently pursuing an Honours degree in Politics, Philosophy and Economics at UCT. MARIUS COQUI EDUARD GREBE Theresa is a historian, on extended leave from her position at Sonoma State University in California. She has a strong interest in migration. Her published work includes a book on migrants into Mexico from the Middle East. RAJEN GOVENDER Marius is the financial officer at the CSSR. He is currently doing undergraduate coursework in chemistry. Adaiah is studying for a masters in economic development, having completed an honours degree in psychology. She is currently working for the CSSR on a project involving the interactions between mental health and unemployment. LILENSTEIN GENERAL Jeremy Seekings is Director of the CSSR. He runs research projects combining quantitative and qualitative data. His own research currently covers aspects of race, class and everyday life in contemporary South Africa and elsewhere, as well as the comparative politics of social policy-making across the global South. Elena is Director of the FaSRU and a Senior Research Fellow. Her interests lie in the field of personal life, kinship, gender, intergenerational relations, divorce, family law and policy, feminist theories, biographical methods and mixed methods. She is currently working on a biographical study on ‘Personal Life and Relationships in South Africa’ and is also involved in a socio-legal study investigating the operations of reformed customary law in practice. Nicole has been involved in research with the African Gender Institute and the School of Public Health at UCT. Her research interests centre on issues relating to women. Currently positioned more broadly in the Sociology of birth, her research focuses on home birth in the greater Cape Town area. As a mother of two, she is especially interested NICOLE MIRIAM in narrativity and the means through which we speak of and DANIELS author our human experiences. Kirsty holds an Honours degree in Sociology from UCT. She is currently undertaking a Master’s degree in Sociology at UCT, through coursework and dissertation. She has been involved in a National Research Foundation Chair in Customary Law Research Project which aimed to understand the operation of reformed customary marriage, divorce and succession laws in practice. KIRSTY BUTTON STANFORD MAHATI Stanford is a migration researcher for the CSSR. He is conducting research on the project on “the functioning and consequences of transnational child raising arrangements in South and North: Angolan, Nigerian and Ghanaian migrant parents living in South Africa and the Netherlands”. He has worked in South Africa and Zimbabwe for over ten years collecting and analysing data. An Ebelin and Gerd Bucerius “Settling Into Motion” Fellow, he specialized in the field of childhood studies and child migration. LINDISWA JAN CHANTAL MILNE Isaac is a researcher and doctoral student in the CSSR, working on variations in social assistance programmes for families and children in selected southern African countries. His thesis is an analysis of why some countries in this region make social protection provision for children and adults, and others not. ISAAC CHINYOKA ANYA JAMY FELTON Anya is a Masters graduate in Development Studies. Her dissertation explored conceptions of parenting through investigating informal foster arrangements for children living in a large township as compared to other residential care settings found in South Africa in terms of financial, legal and social characteristics. She collected life-history and attitudinal data from children and their foster parents using a WOOLLEY range of ethnographic tools. Robert Mattes is Professor of Political Studies and Director of the Democracy in Africa Research Unit at the University of Cape Town. He is also a co-founder and co-Director of the Afrobarometer, a regular survey of public opinion in 18 African countries. His research has focused on the development of democratic attitudes and practices in South Africa and across the continent. Jamy is a research assistant at DARU and Master’s student in Political Studies at UCT. Her thesis topic is titled “Public Evaluations of the South African Presidents”. She is working on the Cape Area Surveys. Her research interests include presidential popularity, voting behaviour, and other forms of political/social attitudes. Lindiswa is a Masters candidate in Practical Anthropology at UCT. She is currently a Research Assistant for the African Legislatures Project at the CSSR. She has experience in community development, social and development activism and volunteering, focusing on youth development through arts and cultural activities. She started a community events management initiative that focused on youth development programmes organisation and coordination. Chantal is a junior research fellow at the CSSR. She holds a Master’s degree in Public Affairs and Administration from UCT. Chantal’s primary research interests include democratic public administration and public administration theory. She is currently the programme manager in DARU on the Open Society Monitory Index and part-time lecturer in the Department of Political Studies. Kevin holds a PhD in Population and Public Affairs from Princeton University and was a post-doctoral research fellow in the CSSR from 20122013. He is now back in the USA but continues to work on CSSR projects, particularly on the 2012 Cape Area Study of democracy education in Cape Town secondary schools. KEVIN O’NEIL MAXINE RUBIN Maxine holds an Honours degree in Justice and Transformation from UCT. Her research interests include: transformation policies; social and distributive justice; political ethics and thought; and postconflict reconstruction and development. She will be pursuing her MA in “Postwar Recovery Studies” at the University of York. She has been working on Module II (formal structures and mechanisms of 17 African parliaments) of the ALP for DARU. CARMEN ALPIN Carmen joined the CSSR in 2013 as the Afrobarometer Network Data Manager. Prior to this, she worked at Idasa in the same capacity. A Spanish national, she graduated in Social Psychology at the Autonomous University of Barcelona and holds an MSc in Development Management as well as an MSc in Industrial Relations & Personnel Management (LSE). DEAN HOROWITZ Dean holds a degree in Human Resource Management from UCT. He has worked for organizations, start-ups and companies on their online media focusing on social media. He is currently studying Political Communication Honours at UCT focusing on social media and opposition parties. He is currently working on the SA National Elections Project for DARU, creating a central database for all election studies in SA. SOHYEON KIM Sohyeon is a Master’s candidate in Political Studies at UCT. She holds a BA in Political Science and Economics from Sookmyung Women’s University in Seoul, South Korea. Her thesis topic is the impact of foreign civil society assistance on the level of civic participation in SubSaharan Africa. At DARU, she is working on the African Legislatures Project. SIHLE NONTSHOKWENI SAMANATHA RICHMOND CARLOS SHENGA Sihle is studying Political Science Masters at UCT, focusing on democracy and education. Her dissertation looks at the extent to which race and school culture impacts educational expectations in the Western Cape. Sihle is a research assistant in DARU working on the Cape Area Study dataset. Samantha completed both her Honours and Master’s dissertations with Professor Mattes in DARU. Her areas of research interest include democracy, citizenship and education.” She is the Operations Manager for the Afrobarometer Network’s Capacity Building Programme and a DARU Research Fellow. Carlos is a Ph.D. candidate in Political Studies at UCT. He has been conducting research for the ALP and collaborating with CNEP (Comparative National Election Project), CSES (Comparative Study of Electoral Systems) and Afrobarometer in Mozambique. His thesis compares Mozambican and African legislatures by focusing on legislative recruitment, development, performance and legitimacy.