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15 June 2023 | Story Lunga Luthuli | Photo Lunga Luthuli
Martie and Charity
Martie Miranda, Deputy Director of CUADS, and Charity Morrison, CUADS Disability Support Manager, have been nominated to lead a Universities South Africa Transformation Managers Forum (USAf TMF) task team to review universal access and disabilities support in the public higher education sector.

Two staff members from the UFS Centre for Universal Access and Disability Support (CUADS) have been nominated to lead a Universities South Africa Transformation Managers Forum (USAf TMF) task team to review universal access and disabilities support in the public higher education sector.

Martie Miranda, Deputy Director of CUADS, and Charity Morrison, CUADS Disability Support Manager, were nominated after a TMF Transformation Strategy Group meeting held in March 2023, at which an assessment of the implementation of the Department of Higher Education and Training’s Strategic Policy Framework on Disability for the Post-school Education and Training System in the public higher education sector was adopted as a group priority. The task team will be run in collaboration with the Higher and Further Education Disability Services Association (HEDSA).

Their nomination to lead the task team is an expression of “the UFS’s commitment to instilling values of care and social justice where staff and students have a sense of belonging”, said Miranda.

Miranda, who currently serves as HEDSA Chairperson, says, “The focus for the task team is to unpack the Strategic Policy Framework’s expectations, and identify the themes and deliverables expected of the higher education institutions (HEIs).”

Supported by Morrison, she will lead a team of volunteers from the TMF and co-opted stakeholders in HEIs in developing a survey questionnaire to examine the status of implementation of the Strategic Policy Framework. The team will submit a report and recommendations to the TMF in November 2023. 

“I am looking forward to tapping into everyone’s expertise, and for the University of the Free State to participate in the survey, which will assist in reflecting on where the institution is on inclusivity and disability transformation,” Miranda says.

Leading transformation and an inclusive agenda

Depending on the findings and recommendations, the task team might be required to monitor and evaluate progress going forward. 

“Serving on the task team gives us the opportunity to see what is happening on the ground, and to make recommendations that will enhance the inclusion of people with disabilities,” Morrison says. “The recommendations will assist with changing the culture of institutions and create a better student experience and well-being in the pursuit of truths and practices that grant human dignity to everybody, per the university’s Vision 130.” 

Miranda added that participating in the task team will create larger benefits for the UFS. “This will also help in co-creating an inclusive environment where CUADS would seamlessly and holistically be integrated into every part of the UFS. It is an opportunity to gain exposure to experiences and practices of other HEIs and identify possible solutions for the UFS to achieve its strategic goal in advancing a transformational institutional culture demonstrating its values.” 

News Archive

Centre for Africa Studies goes quadruple
2014-09-02

The Centre for Africa Studies at the UFS hosted a book launch on 27 August 2014. Prof Heidi Hudson expressed her excitement as she welcomed the audience and authors that evening, “This has not happened yet at our department where we launch four books at the same time, thus it is a happy and glorious moment for us.”

Book 1: Sacred Spaces and Contested Identities. Space and Ritual Dynamics in Europe and Africa. Edited by Paul Post, Philip Nel and Walter van Beek.

This book deals with the fundamental changes in society and culture that are forcing us to reconsider the position of sacred space, and to do this within the broader context of ritual and religious dynamics and what is called a ‘spatial turn’. Conversely, sacred sites are a privileged way of studying current cultural dynamics. This collection of studies on sacred space concerns itself with both perspectives by exploring place-bound dynamics of the sacred spaces in Africa and Europe.

Book 2: Understanding Namibia. The Trials of Independence. Written by Henning Melber.

This study explores the achievements and failures of Namibia’s transformation since independence. It contrasts the narrative of a post-colonial patriotic history with the socio-economic and political realities of the nation-building project.

Book 3: Peace Diplomacy, Global Justice and International Agency Rethinking Human Security and Ethics in the Spirit of Dag Hammarskjöld. Edited by Carsten Stahn and Henning Melber.

This tribute and critical review of Hammarskjöld's values and legacy examines his approach towards international civil service, agency and value-based leadership, investigates his vision of internationalism and explores his achievements and failures as Secretary-General. The book is also available in print. Melber is a Senior Adviser and Director Emeritus of The Dag Hammarskjöld Foundation, Uppsala, Sweden. He is also Extraordinary Professor at both the University of Pretoria and the Centre for Africa Studies, University of the Free State.

Book 4: Au commencement était le Mimisme: Essai de lecture globale des cours de Marcel Jousse ( In the beginning was mimism: A holistic reading of Marcel Jousse’s lectures). Written by: Edgard Sienaert

This publication allows us to hear the voice of Marcel Jousse, professor of Anthropology of Language, who taught in Paris between 1931 and 1957. Edgard Sienaert, after having edited and translated in English all publications of Jousse, returns here to Jousse’s one-thousand lectures, synthesised through the lens of an anthropology of human mimism. Jousse’s train of thought leads us to question our own thought categories stuck in antagonisms: spirit and matter, concrete and abstract, body and mind, science and faith. Sienaert is currently a research fellow at the Centre for Africa Studies, University of the Free State, with an MA and PhD in Romance Philology. He published widely on medieval French literature and on orality. 
 

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