Research Publications (Management Sciences)
Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://ir-dev.dut.ac.za/handle/10321/217
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Item Decolonising public administration content curriculum in a post-colonial South African university: policy monitoring and evaluation perspective(University of KwaZulu-Natal, 2022) Makiva, Msuthukazi; Ile, Isioma; Fagbadebo, OmololuOne of the major areas of focus in public administration discipline is policy monitoring and evaluation. This paper focuses on how this is understood in selected indigenous communities in South Africa. The current public administration curriculum content taught in Universities hardly recognises and reflects bits of practices and realities of indigenous communities, especially in conducting policy monitoring and evaluation. The paper unearths the origins and current state of public administration content curriculum updates taught in selected higher institutions of learning, with specific reference to policy monitoring and evaluation. The article further sought to understand public administration discipline content curriculum alignment with South Africa’s contextual realities in selected indigenous communities of the Eastern Cape. Using explorative research, the study discovered that the teachings of public administration hardly reflect the realities among the indigenous communities. This presents public administration discipline to be epistemic universal instead of being epistemic diverse. The conclusion is that as much as African scholars learn from their European counterparts, all forms of knowledge ought to be documented and amalgamated into curriculum content. It is critical, therefore, that a hybrid will be suitable for policy monitoring and evaluation. In addition, indigenous policy monitoring and evaluation knowledge should be accredited and included in the curriculum content of public administration discipline.Item The impact of internal control practices on minimizing fraud in companies(2021-12-01) Cavaliere, Luigi Pio Leonardo; Lourens, Melanie Elizabeth; Muda, Iskandar; Kumar, Anil; Chabani, Zakariya; Swadia, Bhavik U.; Rajest, S. Suman; Regin, R.Internal control structures are a collection of protocols and regulations that protect an organization's properties, minimizing possibilities for theft and maintaining an organization's potential. For an entity to operate, considerations must be identified to guarantee the organization's smooth functioning like materials, machinery, cash, etc. Certain associations were misled by their members and consumers. This methodology concerns quantitative evidence, as the name implies. There is a range of agreed methodological criteria for the method's feasibility, such as the number of respondents needed for statistically important outcomes. The quantitative method will be implemented to study employees' points of view in the workplace to internal control practices. It will measure the employee’s opinion based on a Likert scale ranging from 1 representing strongly agree to 5 representing strongly disagree. Failure to comply with internal controls is one of the key obstacles to producing good financial performance in companies. While there have been many initiatives in environmental regulation and regulations and internal auditing, a firm's financial success has seen nothing in corporate governance and government policy. Therefore, the relationship between internal control systems and the financial performance of entities must be defined. The research ends with the significant predictors of financial success that involve control setting, internal audit feature, risk reduction, control practices, and corporate governance. The research found that companies that provide effective frameworks for internal control depend on positive financial performance and investment valuation. Failure to respect internal controls is one of the main barriers to successful business success.Item Imperatives for co-operative governance : a case study of local municipalities in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa(KRE Publishers, 2016) Govender, Ivan GunassDespite the South African government’s effort to enhance co-operative governance, the high rate of service delivery protests confirm that co-operative governance has not fully developed as a mechanism to improve service delivery. The aim of the study was to ascertain factors influencing co-operative governance and the perceptions of local government regarding the effectiveness of both the National and Provincial Governments’ support for co-operative governance. The study used the quantitative research method to investigate the needs and extent of co-operative governance in local municipalities with the KwaZulu-Natal province as a case study. The key issues municipalities consider important for improving intergovernmental relations (IGR) include communication and consultation, monitoring and evaluation (M&E), concurrent function clarity and technical support. The paper recommends the implementation of a participatory monitoring and evaluation (PME) system to enhance communications and alignment of the integrated development plans across the three spheres of government.