Journal Articles
Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://localhost:4000/handle/20.500.12504/167
Browse
Browsing Journal Articles by Issue Date
Now showing 1 - 5 of 5
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Item The covid-19 pandemic: economic effects and government measures in Uganda(Sarjana, 2020-06-30) Nabukeera, MadinahCoronavirus also known as COVID-19 started in Wuhan, China in December 2019 and it was pronounced as a pandemic in March 2020 by the World Health Organization (WHO). Although COVID-19 has slowly spread in Africa, but recent spreading is at a high rate. While the recovery rate has been high, Uganda has registered serious impacts on the economic and social front. This paper examined the effect of COVID-19 on employment in Uganda, established the effect of COVID-19 on public demand and prices of inputs in Uganda. It also proposed interventions and how the interventions can be financed. The article recommended that the government should come up with financial interventions which are geared towards improving public demand in the country. The government should come up with a budget to support people who are financially insecure since this may boost demand for public goods and services.Item Management of wetlands and livelihood opportunities in Kinawataka wetland, Kampala-Uganda(Elsevier: Environmental Challenges, 2021-01) Kakuba, Sultan Juma; Kanyamurwa, John MaryWetlands are globally recognized as ecosystems that provide livelihood opportunities in aptly structured management contexts. Many wetlands, particularly those in urban Uganda are, however, getting degraded through infilling, construction, extraction, agricultural and industrial production despite the existing resource management regime. The purpose of this study was to analyze the gap between wetland management practices and extent of sustainable harnessing of livelihood opportunities. Therefore, this study contributes to an understanding of wetland management functions in relation to sustainable livelihoods. Cross-sectional qualitative and quantitative data were collected to investigate the stated relationships. The study established a positive but insignificant relationship between planning function and sustainable livelihood opportunities. Further, the study found a negative significant relationship between implementation and sustainable production. Finally, findings revealed that there was a connection between the control function and sustainable opportunities. The study recommends inclusive management functions to achieve sustainable wetland livelihood opportunities.Item Institutions as images of political authority and power hierarchies: understanding land tenure dynamics of state-making in Zimbabwe and Uganda(Journal of Land and Rural Studies, 2024-01) Fredrick, Kisekka-NtaleThe intricate link between political power and land rights is a historical axiom and Zimbabwe and Uganda present two conflicting yet analogous situations of what happens in agrarian societies, where socio-economic life is organised around access to and use of land. In such communities, institutions of land tenure are powerful mediums that shape political relations, electoral choices and the whole landscape of political interactions that happen in rural communities. This article seeks to examine how the post-colonial state in Zimbabwe and Uganda deliberately and systematically manipulated ‘insecure’ land tenure regimes by deploying institutions as instruments of political control and relevance. We argue that while the British coloniser framed the two counties differently, that is Zimbabwe as a settler colony and Uganda as a native colony, post-colonial land tenure regimes in the two countries were framed as institutional configurations purposefully designed and redesigned by national leaders as instruments of building state authority, organising the rural masses politically and shaping state-citizen allegiances. In this context, we argue that the land reforms in both countries perpetuated economic and regional disparities, inherited from colonial economic policies, and the ethnic and racial divisions, as foundations of state-making. In that regard, the connection between land and political authority may appear delinked and far-fetched, yet, as the Ugandan and Zimbabwean cases illustrate, there is compelling evidence to confirm this contention.Item Analysis of the AU–EU Relations Under the AfCFTA Framework in a Neoliberal Context(Springer, 2024-05) Kanyamurwa, John Mary; Kaddu, Ronald; Karemire, RobertThis chapter contributes to the plethora of neoliberal evidence that addresses itself to the fundamental regional integration political and economic anxieties, specifically focusing on AfCFTA processes. Employing a political economy approach to qualitatively analyze the AU–EU relations, the chapter analyzes these exchange processes in the context of rampant capitalism effectively ushered in Africa from the late 1980s. We demonstrate that the AfCFTA takeoff in 2021 might not quickly bring easy continental trade leap forward mainly due to uneven returns’ distribution dynamics, structural and logistical AfCFTA challenges and the inevitable neoliberal paradoxes set to adversely shape the agreement’s functionality. We, thus, argue that the integration forces within the AfCFTA parties continue to shape the emerging AU–EU relations, nevertheless, with overall progressive indicators to Africa’s industrial revolution. However, these promises are dependent on appropriate policy options undertaken particularly in the next AfCFTA rounds of negotiations. For AfCFTA to become an effective mechanism for promoting productive AU–EU relations, the analysis recommends profound reconstruction of the agreement provisions in the next rounds of trade discourses to ensure a universally profitable trade regime for all partners.Item “Eh eh eh My Lord, Looking Dapper”: Rebranding the Speakership and Women’s Political Leadership in Uganda?(Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland, 2024-10-16) Muzee, HannahIn the 2021 election for the Ugandan Speaker of Parliament, the incumbent Rebecca Kadaga lost to Jacob Oulanyah, who died shortly after due to an illness. Oulanyah’s deputy, Anita Among, took the position despite controversy over her readiness to do so. She has since carved out a path to her unique leadership style, and social media is awash with interest in her fashion. This chapter argues whether fashion is trivial for women politicians like Among or whether it can be used to their political advantage. Using content analysis of social media, I found that fashion drew attention to the Speaker Anita Among and in many ways, seemed to ensure her legitimacy as a contemporary leader. However, some thought the display of fashionable outfits was insensitive to the dire economic situation faced by the majority of Ugandans and did not reflect her competencies.