an inTroducTion To PESTLE anaLySiS SMALL BUSINESS INFORMATION SERIES February 2011 Edition > © Housing Industry Association February 2011 Edition > I HIA members: Have direct access to practical advice and professional assistance including the latest information on technical‚ regulatory and business matters; Receive the latest market information on consumer trends‚ new products and materials; and Benefit from increased business opportunities through skills development
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April 22‚ 2012 Zimbabwe’s Indigenisation Policy Africa possesses vast mineral resources‚ from diamonds to platinum‚ which remain untapped. Recently discovered ore deposits and soaring commodity prices are attracting miners from around the world to Africa. This has led to “resource nationalism”‚ as African countries are looking for ways to maximize their share of the profits from the mining. All over Africa countries are increasing taxes and royalties on mining companies in an effort to maximize
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Comparing Paleolithic Societies A. Both the San and the Chumash preserved their ancient way of life into modern times. B. The San of Southern Africa 1. Northern fringe of the Kalahari Desert (present-day Angola‚ Namibia‚ Botswana) 2. 50‚000–80‚000 San still live in the region 3. Part of the Khoisan language family‚ inhabited southern Africa at least 5‚000 years a. Gathering and hunting way of life‚ with stone tools b. Remarkable rock art‚ going back 26‚000 years i. Tradition
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SEPARATION OF POWERS IN BOTSWANA Government The constitution implicitly recognises the separation of powers by dealing with each of the three organs of government in separate and distinct provisions. The executive is dealt with in chapter IV‚ sections 30-56‚ the legislature in chapter V‚ sections 57-94 and the judiciary in chapter VI‚ sections 95-106. Executive The whole of chapter IV of the constitution deals with the executive. Part I deals with the President and Vice President‚ part II with
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Africa Essay Part 2: Does Africa Have a History? * * * * There has been a notion that Africa does not have a history of its own before Europeans came to Africa. Hugh Trevor-Roper made an infamous statement in 1965 proclaiming‚ “Perhaps‚ in the future‚ there will be some African history
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Africa is one of the biggest continent in the world‚ consisting of many countries all varied in their cultures and economic activities. In order to improve this continent‚ there should be a transcontinental railroad that runs throughout Africa‚ transporting people‚ products‚ and cultures. A good railroad should avoid problems such as diseases‚ famine/poverty‚ natural disasters‚ and geographical features. I chose to focus on avoiding natural disasters‚ geographical features‚ poverty‚ and conflicts
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The !Kung Bushmen of the Kalahari Desert The !Kung Bushmen of Botswana inhabit the semi-arid northwest region of the Kalahari Desert. Their average annual rainfall is poor‚ only six to nine inches a year. Field work for this article written by Richard B. Lee‚ was done in the Dobe area‚ which is a line of eight permanent waterholes. The Dobe area has a population of 466 Bushmen. This includes 379 permanent residents living in independent camps or associated with Bantu cattle posts‚ as well
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HIV/AIDS and Its Effects on Economic Growth Taywanna Drayton ECO 204 Instructor Stephanie Webb August 16‚ 2010 HIV/AIDS and Its Effects on Economic Growth For most developing countries‚ the main source of progress is through industry and domestic saving. In order for industry to be a viable source of progress‚ the country must have a large‚ productive workforce. Certain elements may stymie growth‚ leading to a slow down in development and‚ by proxy‚ a stalled economy. For developing
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1) The Harvard case‚ Botswana: A Diamond in the Rough‚ describes the exceptional case of Botswanas sustained economic rise from near absolute poverty to a country with a 10% average annual GDP growth for more than four decades. This case shows that healthy economic gains can be achieved by a mixture of formal institutions and ad hoc substitutes for missing institutions. When Botswana gained its independence in 1966‚ the country lacked many of the institutions deemed essential for economic growth
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What has landscape architecture and industrialized society to learn from indigenous cultures and their symbiotic relationships with nature? “‘Despite nature’s many earlier warnings‚ the pollution and destruction of the natural environment has gone on‚ intensively and extensively‚ without awakening a sufficient reaction; it is only during the last century that any systematic effort has been made to determine what constitutes a balanced and self-renewing environment‚ containing all the ingredient’s
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