Vice-Chancellor's Update
Season's greetings from Professor Zeblon Vilakazi, Vice-Chancellor and Principal of Wits University.
Season's greetings from Professor Zeblon Vilakazi, Vice-Chancellor and Principal of Wits University.
Wits Press commemorated 100 years of publishing excellence with the launch of the book 'Publishing from the South: A Century of Wits University Press'.
The Wits Postgraduate Merit Scholarship (PMS) was launched in 2023 with funding from a generous alumnus of Wits.
He was my friend and mentor, serving as a bridge between an emerging generation of activist academics and an older generation of more established ones.
Carnegie Mellon University Africa announced today that it will expand its digital public infrastructure initiative across the continent.
The Machine Intelligence and Neural Discovery (MIND) Institute advances AI research, exploring machine, human, and animal intelligence.
Developing nations are least responsible for climate change but cop it worst. Who is responsible for climate change?
Evidence suggests that a low-carbon transition could worsen gender inequalities if not properly addressed in climate policy.
After major refurbishments, the old Johannesburg Planetarium has been transformed into the state-of-the-art Wits Anglo American Digital Dome.
After 64 years, the Johannesburg Planetarium has been upgraded featuring new cutting-edge digital projectors that will enhance its role in science education.
Sasol’s Secunda facility is the largest greenhouse gas emitter in the world. New research looks at how to move the petrochemical manufacturer away from coal.
Whether we’re socialising, shopping, banking, studying or working, billions of people around the world spend hours each day online.
Bonita Meyersfeld
Eskom's proposed 36.1% electricity price hike in South Africa is unaffordable and out of line with the country’s development goals.
The toppling of a mayor of South Africa’s capital city, highlights the provincial ANC's disdain for its national partnership with the DA.
The concept of care can serve as a powerful focal point for understanding the climate challenge and for policies toward a sustainable and equitable future.
From South African freedom fighter to central bank governor and trusted politician.
A deep analysis reveals the flawed structure and opaqueness of the proposed Jomo Kenyatta International Airport deal.
Water expert shares guidelines on how to purify water at home in areas where there is uncertainty over water quality or poor sanitation.
Today is World Mental Health Day with an urgent call to action for employers: 'It is time to prioritise Mental Health in the workplace'.
The controversy over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam reflects historical conflicts rather than a careful analysis of modern challenges.
Corrective policies should be implemented as part of a holistic, long-term strategy to address historical injustices and create a more equitable society.
Fak’ugesi Festival unleashes the potential that lies within communities when technology, art, and culture intersect in Africa.
This year Fak’ugesi #UntilUnlocked celebrates the exciting expansion of African digital creativity.
Data from Kenya’s central bank show that public debt (total money owed) declined between December 2023 and June 2024.
Africa’s biggest creative digital innovation festival is from 3 – 5 October 2024 at Wits’ Tshimologong Digital Innovation Precinct.
Two-day workshop redefines inclusive education and how to leverage new technologies to empower students and staff with disabilities.
Proceeds from the initial R200 million sale of the Frankenwald Estate to be put into an endowment to benefit future generations.
The European Union grant of €32 million is not nearly enough to get the industry going in South Africa. The real cost will be €20 billion.
It shows care, responsibility and looking out for fellow citizens in need. It is also a unique way of sharing compassion across race, colour and class.
Good news for competition in South Africa's electricity market but big hurdles must be overcome before success is achieved.
With growing populations and major youth unemployment in Africa, more must be done to create jobs and help young people develop the right skills.
Amitav Ghosh has used his storytelling prowess to outline the historical and political roots of climate change within systems of power and oppression.
Dr David Phaho will take the helm of the Wits Business School African Energy Leadership Centre (AELC) from 1 September 2024.
These reflect the Wits Innovation Centre's agility and responsiveness in continuing to grow the University’s innovation ecosystem.
The School of Business Sciences held its prestigious annual Prize-Giving Ceremony to honour top-performing students - celebrating academic excellence.
Inequality is bad for politics, the economy, society and climate change, and South Africa has a huge gap between rich and poor.
The 5th African Philanthropy Conference was held against the spectacular backdrop of Victoria Falls in Zimbabwe, and was the biggest gathering yet.
Wits recognises more than a hundred scholars for exceptional research accomplishments in 2024.
Philosophical, legal, moral, teaching and other angles unpacked at Wits SARIMA Carnegie 4th annual Global Ethics Day online event on 6 August.
The donation was made in honour of Professor Margo Steele, the first female head of school of the Wits School of Accountancy.
Too often, a ruling party assumes — wrongly — that what’s good for it must also be good for the nation.
Holding two public officials responsible for the Life Esidimeni tragedy is a legal milestone. It also highlights the consequences of putting costs over care.
The country needs fresh thinking to shift the economy onto a more employment-intensive growth path.
Aspiring African innovators and entrepreneurs converge at Wits to learn skills to transform ideas into market-ready solutions.
Eight PhD students and postdocs were inducted into the programme run by the Wits Transformation and Employment Equity Office (TEEO).
To grow their entrepreneurial spirit and skills, 70 postgraduate students attended the Pan-African Entrepreneurship Week during the winter break.
Catching online scammers: Our model combines data and behavioural science.
Dr Solomon Assefa, the former Vice President at IBM Research, delivered the inaugural Professor Barry Dwolatzky Memorial Lecture.
One of the grant recipient projects from Wits University will investigate the role of micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Sadly, politicos have become the pre-eminent role models for many black South Africans.
The question has shifted from whether cyberattacks will occur to when and how they will happen.
This addition marks a significant step forward in the ongoing efforts to preserve the University's vast archives and collections.
Natalie Zimmelman is a business leader dedicated to the development of skills, leadership, and professionalism.
The E-Hub marks the beginning of a new era in fostering student-led innovation and entrepreneurship.
[Column] To prevent South Africa from becoming a failed society, we must all rise and become active citizens.
Democracy, as a system of government by the whole population, seems to have had its heyday. Is ‘People Power’ a viable option?
Constitutional expert, Professor Cathi Albertyn, answers your questions on the South African Constitution, the bedrock of South Africa’s democracy.
Despite the knife-edge upon which South Africans live, the country is not, in fact, a failed state – but a new form of democracy is required.
Corruption is not unique to SA as US and UK have shown. Democracy relies on holding authorities accountable, but no one seems keen to do that.
Today’s news and current affairs landscape, which underpins our democracy, requires both ethical content producers and discerning consumers.
South Africans are still fighting for the right to basic water supply as enshrined in the Bill of Rights.
The students' achievements underscore the school's impact on transforming the accountancy profession over the 30 years since democracy.
The key to getting public services is to have opposition parties that have realistic chances to replace a sitting government.
This issue is very timely as South Africa celebrates 30 years of democracy, and heads to the polls again on 29 May 2024.
The child support grant and proposed pregnancy grant give children a healthier start in life and make democratic and economic sense.
More than half of SA’s academic publications appear in Open Access sources, with Wits University embracing this trend.
Busisiwe Kamolane-Kgadima, the Acting Director at CALS is driven by human rights, and the fight for social justice.
A stokvel research project at Wits could lead to greater financial freedom, transparency, and accessibility for members.
As countries move to adopt green technologies to fight climate change, the Global South is left at a disadvantage in this new revolution.
[Column] Under the SA Constitution, animals do not enjoy the same rights as humans. But Ubuntu principles can change that, writes Dr Sheena Swemmer.
New Hub will be a place where researchers, entrepreneurs and professionals can get together to leverage technology to solve problems in the field of finance.
Africa’s market share of the digital trade globally is small. But it has expanded rapidly, outpacing the global average.
The is no law specifically obliges companies building new developments like power stations to do a climate change assessment before they start construction.
Researchers take a closer look to determine who the money has gone to, when it was disbursed, and what it was spent on.
The University held its annual Postgraduate Orientation Programme from 4 – 6 March in the Great Hall and online.
The Tech Challenge seeks to foster partnerships between South African and Irish startups.
The Holberg Prize is one of the largest international prizes awarded annually to an outstanding researcher in the humanities, social sciences, law or theology.
A group of ten Wits University staff and students recently attended the Afretec Gender in STEM Workshop in Kigali, Rwanda.
Water can make you ill for two reasons: it can contain chemicals or pathogenic organisms.
Edward Webster: South African intellectual, teacher, activist, a man of great energy and integrity, and the life and soul of any party.
Eddie Webster was the ultimate socially engaged academic who played a key role in the labour movement.
It is with great sadness that we learnt of the passing of Professor Edward (Eddie) Webster (82), who passed away yesterday after a short illness.
Study reveals that from 2050, Africa will suffer from food and water scarcity, and job losses in agriculture, unless climate change mitigation are put in place.
The mother tongue for millions of Deaf people in South Africa is SA Sign Language (SASL), which became the 12th official language on 19 July 2023.
The University received several queries pertaining to fees, funding, financial aid, and accommodation. Here are the many ways Wits assists students.
2023 will be remembered as the year that artificial intelligence (AI) – or, more specifically, large language models (LLMs), like ChatGPT – changed the world.
Professor Valodia's appointment stands as a testament to the University’s commitment to academic excellence and societal impact.
Daven Dass, a key figure in clinical legal education, is dedicated to promoting excellence and access to justice.
Unless something unforeseen occurs, the shape of post-election South Africa is already reasonably clear - it shows a wounded and decaying ANC.
Jacob Zuma claims that his new political home, the Umkhonto we Sizwe Party, is the authentic ANC, not the one led by President Cyril Ramaphosa.
The African Fellowships programme advances South-North research collaboration to find solutions to global challenges.
8 Postdoc Fellows join Wits to boost research on the intersecting themes of climate change, just transition, sustainability, and inequality.
In a world fraught with anxiety, stress, and environmental and humanitarian disasters, people are looking for ways to cope.
Cybercriminals don’t take breaks. Even seasoned internet users fall prey to these scams. Here are seven safety tips from a cybersecurity expert.
In this issue, we highlight the diversity, scope, and multi-dimensional nature of drug-related research at Wits University.
Professor Zeblon Vilakazi, Vice-Chancellor and Principal, extends thanks to Witsies for their service and sends wishes of goodwill for the holidays.
While polarisation has emerged as a defining characteristic of our age, ‘good’ ethics can navigate differences to tackle shared challenges.
Professsor Keith Klugman honoured for his work in preventing infectious diseases and a Gold Medal is awarded to a champion in heritage preservation.
Wits bids farewell to 87 retirees who have served the University well for decades.
Masters students and PhD fellows showcase quality research at the annual Cross-Faculty Postgraduate Symposium.
The Absa chair in Future Energy to enable the development of a new energy modelling laboratory.
Retired judge Edwin Cameron applauds the Wits Law Clinic for its role in embedding public interest law in the country.
There are many unknowns about how societies will manage the climate transition. And the associated energy transition from fossil fuel-based to renewable energy.
Wits alumni win three out of five main categories in leading 2023 competition.
Academy of Science of South Africa (ASSAf) awards Gold Medal to world-renowned HIV expert and inaugurates 15 Wits scholars as new members.
Wits University scholars have secured funding as a network partner of the African Engineering and Technology Network (Afretec).
Breaking barriers to intracontinental mobility is paramount and the continent must engage in closer collaboration, placing science at the forefront.
Changes in the law will ensure that companies can’t go on ignoring inequalities in earnings and wealth in South Africa.
Higher education leaders from across the continent recently convened for the second Pan-African network's annual conference in Nairobi, Kenya.
In his poem about Eloff Street in Johannesburg, Oswald Mbuyiseni Mtshali reflected on the living conditions for a black person in the city at that time.
Big data is not the answer to all the challenges that faced Census 2022, but it may be a key enabler for gathering reliable national data in the future.
The Chair will be located within the Tayarisha Research Group that focuses on the effects and implications of digital transformation and governance in Africa.
Epic parade and student-inspired music festival painted Braamfontein blue and gold as Wits enters its second century.
South Africa needs to match its goals with strong ambition, said IMF’s First Deputy during a talk on campus.
The index, called CICISA is a quarterly index that tracks the evolution of the “investment climate” or “investment attractiveness” of South Africa over time.
The next generation is essential to Africa's future and to global shared interests in creating a safer, healthier, and more prosperous world.
Researchers from all over Wits have been rewarded for their excellence at a Wits ceremony.
Here is how this will help Deaf people to finally have an opportunity to be properly educated in a language they understand.
Former student pledges US$10 million to rename the school after first woman head of school.
Corruption, cadre deployment and BEE has destroyed the notion of public service and replaced it with self-interest, party interests and greed.
On behalf of Wits Philosophy and the South African Philosophy community, Professor Lucy Allais honours Eusebius McKaiser.
Many speak fondly of how Professor Barry Dwolatzky took them into a derelict disco and enthusiastically explained the tech co-working space he envisioned there.
We stand with LGBTIAQ+ people in Uganda and raise strong concerns about the criminalisation of already marginalised people
Wits' research magazine focuses on how our researchers are powering up their creativity and expertise to find sustainable energy solutions.
Editorial: Energy cannot be created or destroyed, but for South Africans it feels like we are upending this fundamental law of physics.
SA’s could create a new model for many countries facing power shortages but it could also lead to more muddling in the dark.
Dr Andrew Lawrence explores how funding received from the Just Energy Transition Partnership can most benefit South Africa.
Scientists can do better to take industry and government-driven hype out of green hydrogen so that its actual potential can be realised.
From Star Wars to hot curry to Einstein – we’ve got you covered.
A tree is not just a tree. It is also fuel, paper, furniture, livelihood, and industry.
The implementation of universal design and access could improve the lives of people living with disabilities.
Cutting greenhouse gas emissions to almost zero is the next big thing on the global agenda, but academics agree it’s not feasible in the medium term on campus.
South Africa needs to reskill and upskill in the face of changing technology and shifting workplaces.
Continued extreme heat exposure is affecting the health of vulnerable groups in communities.
Focusing on the dynamics in the electricity sector, Professor Imraan Valodia outlines the challenges South Africa is facing and what can be done.
South Africa has lost an innovator, a strategist, a humanitarian, and a much-loved Professor who dedicated over 50 years of his life to Wits.
CALS is in the High Court in Johannesburg on Thursday, 11 May, representing residents of Langaville Extension 8
The Wits Brian and Dorothy Zylstra Sports Complex is an integrated facility for training, research, and clinical practice.
Call for Applications for the WESAF Programme now open.
Making the green energy transition a success requires governments to pay attention to environmental factors and socioeconomic imperatives.
The result is that stakeholders are resentful, angry and say most of the Corporate Social Responsibility (CRM) is window-dressing.
The WIC will harness the creativity and ingenuity of the University’s rich, diverse community of innovators to solve complex, real-world problems.
Wits University awarded Dr David Fine an honorary degree at the Faculty of Science graduation ceremony on 17 April 2023.
The first Biomedical Innovation and Entrepreneurship Training Course sparks a new era for #WitsInnovation.
Outstanding matriculants, now Wits students receive Vice-Chancellor’s Scholarship Awards, which covers full tuition fees.
Wits University and the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) at the University of London join forces to offer a first of its kind PhD.
Confidence in banking is hard-earned and easily shocked. This makes individual banks and the sector susceptible to knock-on effects from other institutions.
Professor Lee Berger appointed as National Geographic Explorer in Residence, but will remain at Wits as an Honorary Professor.
Management welcomes the proposal to enter a mediation process as soon as possible and has communicated as such with the SRC.
The University has invested R9-million in postdoctoral fellowships to advance its innovation and internationalisation strategies and its research agenda.
STATEMENT: Wits addresses some of the misinformation being shared by some protestors with students.
The Vice-Chancellor and Principal and members of management met with the current members of the 足球竞彩app排名s’ Representative Council yesterday.
South Africa’s courts are likely to set a high bar in cases brought against the government’s most recent state of disaster declaration.
We refer to Mr Aphiwe Mnyamana's tweet posted at 20:31 tonight and confirm that Mr Mnyamana was suspended on 6 March 2023.
We extend our deep appreciation to all staff and students for seamlessly pivoting to blended teaching and learning today.
South Africa holds the dishonourable title of most unequal country in the world, and Africa’s largest carbon emitter.
We will continue with teaching and learning in a blended learning mode
The Senior Executive Team met on Sunday, 05 March 2023 to consider the demands put forward by the SRC.
Wits issues multiple suspension orders to disruptors who transgressed the University’s rules. All university activities will continue as scheduled on Friday.
The University remains open and the academic programme continues as scheduled.
Entry key and exit points are being managed to ensure your safe entry, and officers will be stationed at key lecture theatres to ensure classes continue.
The University is committed to ensuring that staff and students are safe. The academic programme will continue as scheduled.
Dr Adam Pantanowitz has been appointed as Chair in Innovation and Director of the WIC, and Letlotlo Phohole as Senior Programme Manager.
Energy, joy and commitment at an all-time-high as first-year students join the Wits family.
Solar would provide their dwellings with power, but also a source of revenue if power is sold back to the grid.
Wits University is proud to collaborate with the University of Edinburgh (UoE) to establish a new collaborative doctoral training centre in Africa.
South Africa may have among the largest mass belief in Soviet-style state-centred economics - education is needed on the disastrous impact in post-war Africa.
The South African National Energy Association (SANEA) will launch its South African Energy Skills Roadmap on 27 January 2023.
Moving from Bangladesh to start university in South Africa and using a fourth language stretched Sarah Eram, a student leader in the School of Business Science.
The African Fellowships programme advances South-North research collaboration to find solutions to global challenges.
Wits honours two healthcare professionals who are changing the world for good.
Lack of effective public transport is now a major constraint on economic growth, job creation and business productivity.
Education can’t make up for inadequacies in other policies that continue to cause mass unemployment.
WBS Case Centre takes top three spots at the awards.
‘Scientivist’ says planetary health must be foremost on all agendas because the ill-treatment of animals and delicate ecosystems plays havoc with human health.
Repairing Earth as a whole, together, is a precondition for human durability.
It's that time of the year again when the world gathers to negotiate international climate change agreements.
After two years of Covid, the School of Accountancy holds its annual prize-giving ceremony.
We need to find ways to grieve as individuals, and collectively as a nation, or we risk grief becoming chronic, unleashing psychological and physical illnesses.
We need active citizenship to show social solidarity to break out from the hopelessness, paralysis and apathy
The beverage company has a questionable record not only when it comes to planetary health — its record on human health is abysmal.
We need to teach self-love, self-esteem, and agency assertation at all levels of South African society to rebuilt the state and foster democracy.
Social protection on its own doesn’t shift the dial. Radical economic policies are needed to tackle poverty and inequality.
Living in the world’s most diverse country, and not having friendships that cut across all communities, is to miss out on so much
The prestigious annual awards recognise staff excellence in categories including research, teaching and learning, and professional and administrative services.
Various innovations after the past century have improved the world for many - but there’s still much more for universities to do.
Wits' research magazine celebrates 100 years of changing the world for good.
Guest Editorial: Wits remains a beacon of hope in society. We continue to strive for excellence in all that we do and use our knowledge for the good of society.
Editorial: The stories in Curios.ty 14: #足球竞彩app排名 showcase the University’s sustained participation, influence and impact in the lab, the classroom, and society.
“We live in the most unequal country in the world. We can help bridge the divide and we don’t have any time to waste.” – Dr Judy Dlamini.
Meet the Wits’ science superheroes whose research has saved lives.
The contribution of the Sydney Brenner Institute for Molecular Bioscience to the field of human genomics is rewriting history on the African continent.
Without death, there would be no life – this might sound like ancient mysticism, but Wits scientists are proving it.
Agincourt, one of the longest-running research centres of its kind in sub-Saharan Africa, tracks health and wellbeing over the life course.
Protests are a hallmark of Wits’ history and have contributed to the University’s legacy of social activism, democracy and constitutionality.
South African universities should revisit their multiple publics and explore what a public university in southern Africa today should be.
The Wits Art Museum covers 3 000 m2, housing more than 12 000 artworks, of which 5 551 comprise the Standard Bank African Art Collection.
How has science and research practice at Wits has evolved over a century?
It’s the end of an era as Wits Planetarium is reimagined as a ‘out of this world’ digital dome.
Climate change took nearly a century to become mainstream science. Wits is taking the lead in facing up to the challenge.
Wits researchers have over the past century changed, and challenged, the way we think about the evolution of humanity and our ancestors.
Curiosity about dung beetles could lead us into our future.
Books based on research by Wits authors create a rare recording of history that tracks changes over time.
The development of the Wits Face Database: An African database of high-resolution facial photographs.
Wits is exploring the opportunities created by social enterprises that focus on addressing local, regional and global challenges.
Four Wits units demonstrate how translational research can respond to the needs of a world outside the academy.
Column: Telling the stories of Wits’ research and academics might hopefully light a fire in the mind of the world’s next Einstein.
There is something significantly common in the way in which all good things are good.
"We can improve the quality of life if we focus on what works – education, strong institutions, robust legal, social and fiscal systems." - Piketty
The key to reducing green hydrogen costs in the future lies mainly in technological improvements.
There’s a gap between Kenya’s public spending and its revenue. If the country owes more than it can repay, citizens will suffer.
Following amended regulations announced in August, the Black Sash Trust has withdrawn litigation on social relief of distress grants
CALS represents Open Secrets and the Unpaid Benefits Campaign in holding the Financial Sector Conduct Authority to account for unlawfully cancelled pensions
Three of the president’s advisors talk through what is needed to change the status quo.
Creating employment and fighting corruption are two of the subjects discussed in the wide ranging discussion.
Wits University is as much a part of Johannesburg as is gold mining, and we are opening our gates to all to celebrate with us.
Wits marks its 100th birthday with jam-packed Homecoming Weekend.
The #足球竞彩app排名 Visible Resonance Light Show on 2 September at 7pm on the Great Hall façade will reflect, create, improvise, and imagine Wits’ stories.
Wits University Press is the oldest university press in South Africa and celebrates its centenary in 2022.
Professor Garth Stevens will oversee Human Resources, Transformation and Employment Equity, the Disability Rights Unit and other related units.
Professor Mills Soko spoke to Commissioner Edward Kieswetter about the turnaround at the state institution.
South Africa should ensure that changes to energy-efficient vehicles are done in a way that creates jobs and protects workers.
Big promises, but weak no delivery. The most prominent economic legacy of Kenyatta’s government is runaway public debt.
The wealthy should not be allowed to opt-out of their share of the costs of electricity production and Eskom’s debt.
Artisanal gold mining is highly organised and rule-bound. Men, women and even children participate a hierarchy sustained by buyers, sponsors and customers.
Mozambique’s trade unions have not been a strong force in society – which has left a space for others to fill.
Wits University is home to a wellspring of talent from multiple disciplines where life-changing innovation is incubated.
Challenge for young people is to democratise every aspect of life in society.
It was a night of suspended reality, imaginative film, and sophisticated symphony at the SA premier of William Kentridge’s Oh to Believe in Another World.
Learners enjoy a fun-filled Wits Integrated Experience of academic and student life on the Braamfontein campuses.
“We are never defined by the conditions we face, no matter how challenging they may seem.”
Professor Zeblon Vilakazi, internationally renowned nuclear physicist, joins the ranks of Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin, Albert Einstein, and Stephen Hawking.
Refinery closures in South Africa are shots fired in the long running contestation between the oil refiners and the government.
The iconic Great Hall is back after 足球竞彩app排名 lockdowns and extensive renovations – ready to celebrate Wits' centenary.
Wits staff step up on Mandela Day for food-insecure students.
Return to campus plans and the way forward.
South Africa now does not have a functioning integrated public logistics infrastructure anymore, with roads, rail, and ports all in disarray.
The country’s one-party cadre system will continue to stunt economic development and growth as long as it’s allowed.
South African premiere of the new topically relevant film by Wits alumnus and world-renowned artist, William Kentridge, will take place at Wits in July.
Professor Kurt Sartorius and his colleague from the School of Accountancy, Wayne van Zijl, will set out on an expedition that nearly broke him 50 years ago.
Periods of high food inflation affect poor households the most. This is because they spend a higher percentage of their income on food.
The narrative of the Fourth Industrial Revolution is more aspiration than reality.
Digital platform work is often seen to suit workers’ skills, interests and schedules. But it comes at a cost to their economic security and control.
The impact of hybrid work models on IT skills in South Africa will be among the issues coming under the spotlight this year.
They should also clean their houses, then call out corrupt ‘leaders’ to make churchgoers aware of the damage they cause.
“Young entrepreneurs are one of the country's best hopes in solving the jobs crisis” - Dr Robert Venter, Project Leader for the WEC.
Inflation is bad for any country’s economy. It also hurts the wealth and financial well-being of individuals and households.
SA’s private financial sector should fund all students, no matter their means, with loans underwritten by the state.
Reading expands the knowledge, fosters empathy for others and builds healthy, loving and trusting relationships between children and adults.
Please take note of rising infections in the country and particularly in Gauteng. Please get vaccinated if you have not done so yet.
'Gateway to Success' programme: Creating a holistic, seamless transition from secondary school to university
Wits awards distinguished attorney and dispute resolution luminary Charles Nupen with honorary doctorate in law.
COP27 — the next battleground for climate justice and damage compensation.
Wits University is proud to announce the start of the April graduation season where 5 593 students will be capped between 19 and 29 April 2022.
Law firms need to come together to agree on an anti-corruption stance and shame those who are unethical.
The book comes at a time of great upheaval in the global economy.
Alumnus Dr David Fine's generous donation will be used to establish the Angela and David Fine Chair in Innovation.
South Africa should start offering whistleblowers monetary compensation in cases where they help identify tax evaders.
It is with great appreciation that we thank you and members of our wider Wits community for vaccinating and in so doing, making Wits a safer place for all.
Incorporating climate change accountability into integrated reporting can trigger a global change in climate change thinking.
Accountancy Professor Kurt Sartorius plans to paddle 1100 kilometres down a tributary of the Amazon River to highlight climate change.
足球竞彩app排名s from the Wits School of Accountancy (SOA) have achieved excellent results in the 2022 SAICA ITC.
The two programmes ‘are stepping stones to launch and develop the careers of academics’.
Read the 13th issue of Curios.ty, themed: #Gender. We feature research across the gender spectrum that aims to ensure a more equitable and tolerant society.
EDITORIAL: The way we choose to identify ourselves provokes questions and demands interrogation to ensure a more equitable and tolerant society.
Structures need to be put in place at higher education institutions to give women their rightful opportunities.
The gender binary has reached its expiry date but it still hasn’t been consigned to society’s dustbin.
The work that women do in households is largely overlooked, yet it is critical for a well-functioning society.
Coloured women find their centre beyond the whisper and gossip.
Could a growing understanding of the role of women in African philanthropy spark the evolution of the charitable giving sector?
Eight female fellows of the Female Academic Leadership (FALF) Programme at Wits share their experiences of breaking the glass ceiling.
Wits strengthens EU partnerships through becoming a CIVIS Alliance strategic partner.
Scientific diplomacy must be given a chance to help enhance mutual understandings across political divides.
Professor Lynn Morris says universities 'value independent inquiry, intellectual excellence, integrity, and academic freedom and institutional autonomy'.
The University aims to raise R3 billion through the Centenary Campaign
Wits student wins the country’s premier budget speech competition.
The academic programme began in earnest today and it was fantastic to see students in class again and staff back on campus.
Utopian thinking, revisiting the ideas of Rick Turner in the current political context.
The sums aren’t adding for South Africa on either the spending or revenue side. It’s a problem that’s developed over time with no action being taken.
LogBox App is being streamlined to make it easier for you to complete the questions.
Basic income support is not a question of government “being generous”. The money will be taken from employed citizens and the affluent.
The South African government released new 足球竞彩app排名 regulations as at 31 January 2022, pertaining to changes to isolation protocols.
CALS will be in the Constitutional Court on Thursday to argue that the law needs to be developed to respond to strategic litigation against public participation
CALS hopes to assist the High Court of Malawi sitting as the Constitutional Court in a matter that raises important issues around children's rights
The census will focus everyone on the core challenges the country faces, where they are, and who is most affected.
Publications by academics from Wits and the Public Affairs Research Institute feature in the Report.
Wits team develops social distancing and shopper behaviour tracker for malls.
Apply for reasonable accommodation and upload your international vaccine certificate.
足球竞彩app排名: Scientists without quality data are like unarmed soldiers in a war zone.
Scientists say the Commission’s statement against mandatory vaccinations is offensive, irresponsible and misleading.
The Civil Society Working Group on State Capture urges the Commission to ensure those who enabled state capture are held to account
足球竞彩app排名: On 15 March 2020, President Cyril Ramaphosa declared a national state of disaster in terms of the Disaster Management Act.
If you are experiencing glitches in uploading your certificate, this information might help. You can also log technical queries via ithelp@wits.ac.za.
Mandatory vaccination: The link to upload your vaccine certificate is now live.
Wits University adopted a Mandatory Vaccination Policy (Mvax Policy), which will be implemented from 1 January 2022.
CALS and the 足球竞彩app排名 Litigation Society announce the 32 teams through to the second round of this year's Public Interest Law Moot Court Competition
Wits Universit's Mandatory Vaccination Policy (MVAX Policy) will be implemented in January 2022.
Hundreds of legal clients in just months underscores the desperation of the indigent even during lockdown.
Early data show that Omicron is dominating new COVID-19 cases in Gauteng province.
From the Desk of the Wits Vice-Chancellor and Principal, Professor Zeblon Vilakazi: We are stronger because of the diversity of our people and our ideas.
CALS is appearing before the Constitutional Court in a matter that raises important questions about the right to social security and access to courts
Read the full statement, the policy, and the Q&A information document wherein Wits experts answer questions about vaccination, legal, ethical, and more.
National Treasury’s strategy to overcome South Africa’s chronic fiscal crisis rests on highly uncertain political and economic foundations.
The new Wits Entrepreneurship Clinic will form part of the Innovation for African Universities Project that will drive economic development.
We need to move away from this binary approach, consider our contextual realities, and start with the end goal in mind.
Prof Tshepo Madlingozi has signed an expert legal opinion which finds states have an obligation not to block the proposed COVID-19 TRIPS Waiver
"We will also continue to engage with the broader Wits community on the proposed policy in the coming weeks."
It is important to impress upon those who boycott elections that their votes do count and they can force change.
Poll chancers: politicians who make false promises must be punished.
The shift to emergency remote teaching and learning enabled academics to start questioning some long-held assumptions about in-person teaching and learning.
In SA it is alarming and legally dangerous to have a judgment that consensual foreplay implies consent for penetration and sex, and thus rape did not occur.
The Faculty of Commerce, Law and Management won THREE awards from the Vice-chancellor’s office, recognizing the exceptional work carried out by staff in CLM.
The CLM T&L Centre Team are the recipients of the VC’s Team Teaching Award for 2021
The annual 足球竞彩app排名 Awards reflect the Wits values that drive the ethos and excellence across our remarkable institution.
The South African Coalition for Transitional Justice calls for a reparations policy for those who have experienced gross human rights violations
The proposed Framework has been developed and will be shared with staff, students, senior managers, organised labour, and other constituencies for comment.
CALS and our partners invite you to join a virtual consultation on the latest draft of the legally binding instrument on business and human rights on 12 October
Mental Health: How are we doing? What do we need to do?
Wits launches global appeal, former Wits SRC President donates $100,000 to support students
Calls to permit nurses in South Africa, Kenya and Tanzania to prescribe morphine to help ease patient's suffering and give them a dignified death.
Greater urgency is needed in the response to pandemics, to end AIDS and to end COVID-19.
Greater urgency is needed in the response to pandemics, to end AIDS and to end COVID-19.
Registration is open for the virtual Public Interest Law Gathering taking place on 13 and 14 October 2021
It will help to establish two research centres to boost cancer and vaccine research at the University of the Witwatersrand.
While South Africa has steered clear of compulsory vaccination for now, the country’s laws do allow such a policy.
The Institute prioritises its own ideological predilections rather than devoting itself to the betterment of race relations.
The cart is still behind the horse
Read the latest issue of our quarterly newsletter and find out about our work trying to promote equality and social change
Sarakinsky was a political philosopher, passionate about public governance and the green economy.
Details on vaccination and the return of staff members to campus.
The South African Quantum Technology Initiative (SA QuTI) aims to drive local quantum technology research and innovation.
Recent developments in the organisation of production have led to the decline of wage employment across much of the world.
There is no doubt about the enormous scale of the shocks South Africa has experienced over 2020-21.
Join us for the virtual launch of "Mental Health, Legal Capacity and Human Rights" co-edited by CALS fellow Faraaz Mahomed
The AI Africa Consortium partners with Cirrus AI to bring large-scale AI infrastructure capacity and expertise to the African research community and industry.
CALS is partnering with Women Affected by Mining United in Action to host a series of workshops around the country on gender-based violence
This article has been published in the print and online edition of the Daily Maverick.
To rebuild lost credibility, the South African government can start by listening to social partners and the business sector.
Wits staff and students can now get their 足球竞彩app排名 vaccine at the Netcare site on campus.
We are being cautious about the implications for vaccine efficacy and transmissibility while we gather more data to understand this lineage.
Trevor Ngwane shows how structures that emerged in the struggle against apartheid continue in democratic South Africa, now in conflict with the ruling ANC.
The right to free and fair elections may be undermined if political parties cannot campaign due to COVID-19 restrictions by the state.
The court has lived up to its promise in most cases, issuing some progressive and ground-breaking decisions and remedies.
This year's Public Interest Law Gathering will take place virtually on 13 and 14 October 2021
Central bankers must act independently, without fear or favour.
Wits staff and students can now get their 足球竞彩app排名 vaccine at the SABC vaccination site in Auckland Park.
Wits staff and students who are 18 years and older can now get their 足球竞彩app排名 vaccine at the Liberty vaccination site in Braamfontein.
Former Minister Bathabile Dlamini faces prosecution for perjury following statements to the Constitutional Court and before a section 38 inquiry
CALS is set to appear in the Palm Ridge Magistrates Court to defend a woman accused of killing her abusive partner during an incident of domestic violence
Basic income must be embedded within a broader strategy of economic reform, aimed at increasing the social wage and improving working conditions.
What might happen in South Africa?
Our cutting-edge research offers #Solutions to some of the most challenging problems facing society today.
Editorial: From solutions to the structural, political, and socioeconomic challenges in South Africa, to those ‘moonshot moments’ that advance society for good.
South Africa’s infrastructure seems to be falling apart at the seams. What needs to be done to save the country from further deterioration?
A ‘world class African City’ begins and ends with history and geography.
A wealth tax could make a significant contribution to alleviating South Africa’s ailing fiscal situation.
Can love be the central guiding value in big business and in complex decisions?
The ructions caused by the pandemic are an opportunity to reconsider core values and spending priorities to address our social ills.
Despite the fact the philanthropy is pervasive – benefactors and beneficiaries abound – relatively little is known about its practice in an African context.
Column: We don’t just have the ability to turn South Africa around, we have a responsibility to do so.
Civil society organisations are hosting a workshop on 9 September on the threat of cost orders to public interest litigation
When politicians and others speak about herd immunity, unfortunately, they are under the misconception that the current tools that we’ve got are adequate.
An agency could accelerate land reform by removing the process from political and bureaucratic control.
The circulation of misinformation about the 足球竞彩app排名 vaccine poses the danger of hampering the government’s efforts to control the pandemic.
Stronger agricultural research and development systems will enable agriculture to power Africa’s transformation.
Failure to ensure access for all to prevention and treatment, including vaccines, undermines national responses to 足球竞彩app排名.
We call on Acting Health Minister Mmamoloko Kubayi to do the right thing to ensure the 足球竞彩app排名 vaccination programme is inclusive.
We are likely to keep being hit by further waves of this virus until at least all adults have immunity.
Schools are not driving the COVID-19 pandemic and can safely remain open provided people stick to the non-pharmaceutical interventions for COVID-19 prevention.
Abongile Nkamisa of CALS argues that recent civil unrest draws attention to the urgent need for universal basic income support
The Civil Society Working Group on State Capture connects recent civil unrest to the legacy of state capture and corruption
Despite the critical role of the PHRU as part of the national and international 足球竞彩app排名 response team, it was not spared during the recent unrest.
Over sixty civil society organisations write an open letter expressing concern over the current situation in Eswatini
Professor Barry Dwolatzky has been contracted as Director of Innovation Strategy.
The glaring failure by authorities to secure an area notorious for attacks on trucks prompts questions about, at best, utter ineptitude, or at worst, complicity
Over the past week, democratic constitutionalism and the rule of law have undergone a massive stress test.
CALS expresses deep concern over the current unrest and calls for a response which includes immediate social relief and long-term change to address inequality
South Africans should not panic about the food system. But authorities will need to act swiftly and assertively to restore stability.
The Coalition responds to the recent civil unrest and the role of government in addressing the underlying issues of economic injustice
Corruption thrives in a destabilised state with weak institutions. South Africa cannot be allowed back to that space because there will be no turning back.
The Claude Leon Foundation will fund two research chairs and a research programme in water stewardship worth R15.7 million.
South Africa has clearly suffered the consequences of poor strategic decisions to this point. It doesn't need to continue along these lines.
South Africa didn't engage early enough with pharmaceutical companies in bilateral discussions to ensure it could get vaccines early.
Professor Ruksana Osman has been appointed as Senior DVC: Academic and Professor Ian Jandrell as DVC: Systems and Operations.
The collapse of local government in small towns is beginning to affect investment in farming, and the ability of agribusinesses to operate.
Award-winning screenwriter and producer, literary critic, a towering intellectual and generous mentor.
Many unemployed young people are engaged in a variety of economic activities. These may not necessarily be recognised as a form of self employment.
Read the latest issue of our quarterly newsletter and find out about our work trying to ensure justice and accountability
The Mthatha High Court recently ordered the Sakhisizwe Local Municipality to release documents related to its state of governance
The JCSE-IITPSA Skills Survey assesses skills demand and supply from both a corporate and practitioner perspective.
Civil society sends open letter to the President, Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy and Minister of Health on the need to vaccinate mining communities
CALS represents residents from Rosettenville in Johannesburg whose water supply has been unlawfully disconnected by Johannesburg Water
This summary of a presentation made to a colloquium organised by Capacity Building Programme for Employment Promotion outlines priorities for SA’s power policy.
Vishnu Padayachee’s contribution to economics in South Africa is unmatched.
Rethinking capitalism requires that the primary focus should be on the distribution of economic power as the potential leading causal factor driving inequality.
CALS is very pleased to announce that Ms Palesa Madi has officially been appointed as Deputy Director of our organisation
The third wave of the coronavirus has started in Gauteng and is rapidly gaining momentum as we head into the winter season.
Companies being required to go public with information about executive and workers pay packets is increasingly becoming the norm.
Gauteng citizens need to know the uncomfortable truth: for the next six years, their water supplies will increasingly have to be restricted.
A protest which results in a shutdown and interference with the rights of others may delegitimise the cause and allow the government to escape accountability.
Members of the Bertha Justice Network speak out about the current humanitarian crisis in Palestine
How power is distributed in SA and how those with power think about wealth and income.
Rob Davies is critical of economic policy. He reserves particular criticism for its macroeconomic policy framework introduced in 1996.
Wits law entities are using their expertise for public good in society.
CALS, Black Sash and Freedom Under Law note that former Minister of Social Development Bathabile Dlamini has paid the costs awarded against her personally
CALS represents Open Secrets and the Unpaid Benefits Campaign in a challenge to the secretive process for making appointments to the FSCA
Government support for farmers, higher rainfall and grain imports have helped sub-Saharan Africa stave off food insecurity - region isn't out of the woods yet.
CALS is in the Pretoria High Court this week for a review of the 2018 Mining Charter which we believe was developed without meaningfully engaging communities
The Civil Society Working Group on State Capture publishes an open letter on state capture and corruption to mark Freedom Day 2021
CALS represents some of the 900 people facing eviction by the City of Cape Town and are working to ensure their rights are protected during this process
Civil society calls on the President, Treasury and Department of Social Development to extend the special COVID-19 relief of distress grant
On 15 and 16 April, CALS hosted the final rounds of this year's Public Interest Law Moot Court Competition in partnership with the 足球竞彩app排名 Litigation Society
Nile communities carefully monitored and recorded the river’s flow. Centuries later these records are still being used by water resource managers.
Read the latest issue of our quarterly newsletter and find out about our recent wins and losses around activist victimisation and more
A huge congratulations to the four teams going into the semi-finals of this year's Public Interest Law Moot Court Competition
Next week, two individuals with terminal illnesses will begin testifying about why they want the right to die
CALS represents around 900 people currently facing eviction from Cissie Gool House in Cape Town
Ms Dlamini has so far avoided all efforts at recovering legal costs she was directed to pay by the Constitutional Court over two years ago
Tertiary education often carries societal benefits that far outweigh the initial investments necessary to establish a strong and productive system.
Professor Zeblon Vilakazi, Vice-Chancellor and Principal, shares three core areas that Wits will maintain as the University transitions into its next century.
Policy changes that forced government departments to buy locally produced vehicles would be good for the economy.
Deputy Judge President Goliath yesterday ruled that a defamation case brought against environmental activists is inconsistent with our constitutional values
CALS is set to present argument on secondary trauma and the duty of care that police have towards victims of crime, particularly sexual offences
The Novavax vaccine is the first that provides objective scientific evidence that it can protect people against the variant virus circulating in South Africa.
All University entities are required to be fully operational as from 1 February 2021.
Update on the return to campus of staff members.
CALS represents a group of residents from Rosettenville who will be left homeless if an eviction order is granted against them on Monday 1 February
Clinical efficacy demonstrated in Phase 2b South Africa trial.
The pandemic demands a relook of how we connect with each other and the world.
CANVAS, a modern, stable Learning Management System (LMS).
South Africa has the legal tools to challenge the vaccine nationalism of rich countries.
Update on the latest 足球竞彩app排名 testing and infection of staff and students.
It will take 67% of the population to be vaccinated to reach herd immunity; here is how those still reluctant can be persuaded to join in.
Implications for the (mis)management of 足球竞彩app排名 in South Africa.
African leaders can make strategies to fight COVID-19 more accessible to the people.
New paper shares details on how to implement a wealth tax in South Africa.
Update on the latest 足球竞彩app排名 testing and infection of staff and students.
Professor Vilakazi assumed office on 1 January 2021 and looks forward to stewarding the University in his capacity as the Vice-Chancellor and Principal:
Critics of the South African government argue that it has done too little too late to secure vaccines, and that it doesn't have a proper roll-out plan in place.
Pasha 91: Blunders that left South Africa trailing in the vaccine stakes
The C19 People's Coalition calls for a just response to COVID-19 including equitable access to an effective vaccine
Drones, dinghies and an army helicopter - the new toys are diverting resources, and diverting attention.
This article examines and estimates the financial implications of a vaccine strategy with a goal of achieving herd immunity.
It is distressing to hear senior officials increasingly talking down the prospects for the availability and usefulness of 足球竞彩app排名 vaccines in South Africa.
Implications of adjusted Level 3 regulations for staff and students.
Beyond the pandemic and possibilities for new knowledge architectures.
What are the urgent steps that South Africans need to take to prepare for a timeous life-saving roll out of vaccines?
Gauteng Government, IBM Research and Wits University are fighting the pandemic with artificial intelligence.
Update on the latest 足球竞彩app排名 testing and infection of staff and students.
Wits University has taken all graduation ceremonies online, following the President’s announcement on Monday night.
Vice-Chancellor and Principal, Professor Adam Habib, will leave Wits University at the end of December 2020.
Update on the latest 足球竞彩app排名 testing and infection of staff and students.
Read the latest issue of our quarterly newsletter and learn how we are supporting activists, challenging unfair decisions and more
Professor Adam Habib, Wits Vice-Chancellor and Principal conferred awards to exceptional staff members at the University.
How can you trust what you are told about 足球竞彩app排名?
Update on the latest 足球竞彩app排名 testing and infection of staff and students.
Wits University has been endorsed by the prestigious International Nuclear Management Academy for its Nuclear Technology Leadership Programme.
The School of Law’s SARChI Chair, Professor Cathi Albertyn, has been cited in a ground-breaking judgment on equality for domestic workers.
Update on the latest 足球竞彩app排名 testing and infection of staff and students.
CALS and R2P are in the Bloemfontein High Court on 26 November representing the Goldfields Community Forum challenging an interdict against protest
Register for postgraduate study at Wits University and be part of the future of exciting possibilities.
Update on the latest 足球竞彩app排名 testing and infection of staff and students.
Following President Cyril Ramaphosa's address.
Update on the latest 足球竞彩app排名 testing and infection of staff and students.
South Africa is testing digital technology to detect outbreaks of respiratory diseases.
Quality assurance entities are immobilising the system and hindering the ability of more students to access online education.
Wits researchers develop solution to improve accuracy and safety of 足球竞彩app排名 testing.
Update on the latest 足球竞彩app排名 testing and infection of staff and students.
Resolution of the fiscal crisis depends on faster economic growth which must be led by private investment.
足球竞彩app排名: When and how South Africa should try to prevent or mitigate it.
Update on the latest 足球竞彩app排名 testing and infection of staff and students.
The Right2Protest Project hosted at CALS raises concerns over the brutal treatment of protesters in Nigeria calling for an end to police brutality
It is key to continue high-impact non-pharmaceutical interventions that will not impede economic activity, but limit the spread of COVID-19.
The 2020 Fak’ugesi African Digital Innovation Festival will run for one month from 20 October to 20 November 2020.
Civil society organisations and affected communities host an interactive workshop on the second revised draft of the binding treaty on business and human rights
Latest update on infections and university protocols.
Clashes between mining companies and communities are often about the age-old question of whether mining can benefit the many or only a selected few.
This week CALS signed a memorandum of understanding with the African chapter of the Attorney General Alliance (AGA-Africa)
Civil Society demands that the government provide support to the most vulnerable in this moment of crisis by extending and increasing SRD and caregivers grants
Appeal to adhere to safety regulations and preventative protocols.
CALS represents Eastern Cape activist Lungile Mxube who will be appearing in court on Thursday for a defamation case we argue is meritless
Answers to queries raised by organised labour and staff members.
On 6 October, CALS and ACCA will be hosting a webinar to formulate an African response to the current draft of the Binding Treaty on Business & Human Rights
We welcome the news that South Africa will move to national lockdown level 1 from Monday, 21 September 2020.
Read the latest issue of our quarterly newsletter – featuring game-changing judgments, celebrations, our brand new moot court competition and more
Digital divides ensure that only 11% of households have access to the internet.
CALS and the 足球竞彩app排名 Litigation Society invite students of law at South African universities to participate in a Public Interest Law Moot Court Competition
Communities all over South Africa are faced with a water crisis resulting from systemic governance failures
Join us for the virtual launch of "A Better Future: The Role of Higher Education for Displaced and Marginalised People" on 2 October 2020 from 15:30 SAST
A balancing act between scientific data and health and broader socioeconomic implications is needed when policymakers prioritise interventions and measures.
The experience of the Oxford vaccine and the measures put into place are not unusual. Many phase one and phase two clinical trials have holding rules.
CALS Acting Deputy Director, Palesa Madi, and Stanley Malematja from Right2Protest appear on this year's list of the Mail & Guardian 200 Young South Africans
CALS mourns the loss of a true giant of human rights lawyering, our friend and colleague George Bizos
Pasha 80: Fighting the coronavirus can put severe strain on a person’s mental health.
Rest in peace Advocate Bizos, knowing that you have left a lasting legacy in gifting freedom to our people.
One week after the High Court ruled sheep may only be exported live by sea under strict welfare standards, they are already being loaded onto a waiting ship
Pasha 78: Listen to Professor Shabir Madhi, explaining how the new vaccine trial will work
Many voice concern over the judgment against Beatrice Mtetwa which undermines the right to freedom of expression and rights of the accused and detained
Poor populations bore a disproportionately higher burden of poor health.
New regulations governing lockdown alert level two offer greater protections against evictions and demolitions
SA should fire the current Cabinet and set up a national “emergency” one with the best talents in the country prevent it from plunging down the cliff.
When university resources are scarce, building and sustaining equitable research excellence should be paramount.
Wits is top of the class in the 2020 Academic Ranking of World Universities.
Three South African vice-chancellors paint a post-COVID picture for universities.
Women’s extended working days have become normalised, despite the adverse effects on their progression within the labour market and general well-being.
Special Report by the Wits School of Accounting on how companies should manage the 足球竞彩app排名 pandemic.
The third in a series of expert advisories on how to respond to 足球竞彩app排名 which will be published from time to time by Maverick Citizen.
This is the second of a series of Expert Advisories on how to respond to 足球竞彩app排名 which will be published from time to time by Maverick Citizen.
This is the first of a series of expert advisories on how to respond to 足球竞彩app排名 which will be published from time to time by Maverick Citizen.
The Eastern Cape High Court is set to hear arguments in an interdict to prevent around 70,000 sheep from being exported live to the Middle East
Join us for a virtual workshop on Decolonial Comparative Law from 6 - 7 October co-hosted with the Wits School of Law and the Max Planck Institute in Hamburg
Limpopo communities call for officials to face jail time and personal costs for consistent failure to provide water in line with court orders even amid pandemic
The remarkable economic transformation of Asia in recent decades has attracted global attention.
Changing social norms in a short amount of time is difficult, and a one-size-fits all policy is unlikely to have the desired effect.
The University of the Witwatersrand is pleased to announce the appointment of Mr Maurice Radebe as the new Head and Director of the Wits Business School (WBS).
Investments are starting to help grow the African continent's science preparedness.
Africa accounts for nearly 27% of the World Trade Organisation's membership and 35% of members from developing countries, but an African has never run it.
CALS welcomes the appointment of Dr Tlaleng Mofokeng as the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the right to health
Even though women have suffered two thirds of the job losses since February, men have received two thirds of 足球竞彩app排名 grants (65%).
There is concern over the growing influence of non-regional players in decision making at the regional bank.
South Africa’s opposition parties appear to be confused, chasing shadows or paralysed by the enormity of the 足球竞彩app排名 crisis.
With the onset of the Coronavirus/足球竞彩app排名 pandemic, working and studying remotely have increased the risk of cybercrime.
Witsies, please take care, adhere to social distancing and follow 足球竞彩app排名 protocols.
Not enough clinical research is being done in Africa. This has repercussions for when interventions become available and effective in high income countries.
Increased capital investment and productivity need not result in job losses. Industrial policy can link investment incentives to job preservation and creation.
Government urgently needs an integrated 足球竞彩app排名 response to deal with mental illness, violence and crime.
足球竞彩app排名s who are scheduled to return as part of phase 2, will return in mid-July.
SA had to have a hard lockdown because we don’t trust our government. Little since has made us change our minds.
South Africa's public health system has been allocated R21.5 billion more to fight the 足球竞彩app排名 pandemic but there's no strategy to guide how it should be used.
South Africa will have to prioritise new business, employment and growth based on the current and new domestic and global needs unleashed by 足球竞彩app排名.
Understand the three things that can make the most difference to easing the lockdown and reopening South Africa with the least risk.
The budget is one of the key tools that government has to effect meaningful change.
Professor Zeblon Vilakazi appointed as the Wits Vice-Chancellor and Principal from 1 January 2021
The first participants in South Africa's first clinical trial for a vaccine against 足球竞彩app排名 will be vaccinated this week.
Testing and tracing has not been at a level needed to suppress the spread and must now focus on containing opportunities for super-spreading and transmissions.
South Africa needs to focus urgently on how COVID-19 will reshape its labour market.
Government is steaming ahead with the reopening of schools. This is an overly hasty, ill-considered step for a number of reasons.
Detecting fever requires measuring core body temperature. Screening measures the body's surface temperature.
South Africa’s governance model, the way the country is run, is broken.
What we've been working on during lockdown, featuring human rights defenders facing SLAPP suits, the difficulties of trying to stay home without a home and more
足球竞彩app排名s and staff members who have not already done so, must complete the student survey or staff survey before 8pm on Thursday, 11 June 2020.
By identifying the roots of global ills there's an opportunity for coordinated action as countries lay new pathways for a post-Covid world.
Pasha 66 - The Conversation Africa's podcast series focus on questions arising from the symptoms of people who have contracted the coronavirus.
Self-screening form on the app is for staff members with permits to be on campus, and students who have been invited to return to campus only.
CALS is very pleased to be partnering with the Nelson Mandela Foundation on a project addressing home, land and tenure issues during lockdown
We are intervening in a 'defamation' case against environmental activists we believe is a perfect example of strategic litigation against public participation
Join the Climate Justice Coalition in calling for a green new Eskom at a digital rally this World Environment Day
Social justice movements and organisations call on government to a reinstate blanket ban on evictions
To mark his first anniversary with us, CALS would like to show our appreciation for a leader who has proved both brilliant and compassionate in trying times
South Africa should use its remaining AGOA window to find other export markets and retool its economy - as US economic attitude towards Africa hardens.
New level 3 regulations mark an important strategic shift in the government’s approach to the coronavirus pandemic.
The testing backlog and proposed testing strategies outside hospital settings are threatening patient management and compromising health care workers’ safety.
The most profound change is the accelerated of way in which digital transformation and the Fourth Industrial Revolution have moved at warp speed.
New initiative provides students with data to access selected URLs through the Wits network.
So-called African solutions that are often uncritically accepted as ‘good’ do nothing for the continent
Statement of Support for Professor Glenda Gray and the Principle of Academic Freedom of Speech.
Book sheds new light on the evolution of the economic policy of the African National Congress, South Africa's governing party.
The four telecommunications companies agree to extend the provision of data to students for another 15 days.
That 足球竞彩app排名, the lockdown and whatever will come after will have had a lasting and devastating impact on our economy seems indisputable.
CALS has been admitted as a friend of the court in a matter where the City is attempting to block human rights monitors from accessing a shelter
The Reserve Bank should be allowed to buy more government bonds and securities to support the liquidity of the banking system.
South Africa should base its COVID-19 mitigation strategy on the premise that the pandemic will last for two years unless a vaccine is developed before then.
Ramaphosa's call for a new social compact will fall on deaf ears unless there are some fundamental changes to the way in which the pandemic is being managed.
A reminder to all students and staff about Wits' mental health and wellbeing services that are available to you during the 足球竞彩app排名 pandemic and lockdown.
A member of staff of the Wits Law Clinic is the first attorney in Gauteng to be admitted to the high court online.
Dozens of organisations have endorsed a letter to the National Command Council asking for the moratorium on evictions to continue during alert level four
SA's response to the COVID-19 pandemic was one of 'intervene first and ask questions later'. Now is the time for government say what its strategic endgame is.
The Labour Court has ordered the state to adopt measures to prevent the spread of the coronavirus in mines and to engage meaningfully with affected communities
Civil society is still concerned over the exclusion of mining affected communities from deliberations and lack of measures to protect them from the coronavirus
Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky argues that our work trying to hold apartheid's banks to account shows the need for urgent reform of the OECD accountability mechanism
A wealth tax on the top 1% of South Africans could raise R143 billion. This corresponds to 29% of the R500 billion COVID-19 package announced by the government.
The SANDF and SAPS should not enforce the COVID-19 lockdown at the expense of undermining human rights, personal dignity and common sense.
Getting food to the vulnerable, needy and poor during the COVID-19 lockdown is now increasingly urgent.
Community network MACUA, represented by CALS, is applying to intervene as a friend of the court in AMCU's urgent Labour Court application
A major step forward, but some warning lights are flashing. President Cyril Ramaphosa’s social and economic rescue package leaves some questions unanswered.
We’d all love to know more about our neighbours – from COVID-19 data, census data and other official data sources – but we shouldn't.
Given the protracted nature of the risk posed by the COVID-19, this paper seeks to address the need to match health prevention and a viable economy.
These Wits heroes represent just a fraction of the clinical, academic, professional and administrative staff, alumni and students responding to this disaster.
University human rights centres call for South African government’s intervention on correctional centres’ conditions during the coronavirus pandemic
Wits University has adopted the Global Code of Conduct for Research in Resource-Poor Settings (GCC) to curtail the practice of ethics dumping.
South Africa cannot afford to embark on a strategy of extended periodic lockdowns. It needs to shift to mass testing and contact tracing.
We respond to the amendments to Lockdown regulations relating to the mining sector
University centres call on the state to address the plight of migrants during the coronavirus crisis
Civil society writes to President Cyril Ramaphosa and Minister Gwede Mantashe on measures to protect mining-affected communities and workers from coronavirus
Crowdsourcing is a promising approach to biomedical research and development (R&D) and could produce solutions to pandemics like this one.
50+ economists and others from Wits are part of a group of more than 78 who wrote an open letter urging President Cyril Ramaphosa for more significant action.
A response to the State identifying areas for de-densification in an effort to combat the spread of Coronavirus
To stop economic destruction, we need to refocus vast resources from other productive activity – a truly grand prize might do the trick.
The virus has wiped billions from stock exchanges globally. Now is the time to re-evaluate and promote domestic private investment.
The 足球竞彩app排名 crisis is first and foremost a health and humanitarian crisis is likely to have lasting impacts on how we live.
Amongst the best in their fields, Wits experts are at the frontlines and behind-the-scenes against COVID-19, the respiratory disease caused by the coronavirus.
27 social justice movements and organisations have written to government calling for a moratorium on all evictions in light of the coronavirus pandemic
Read the latest issue of our quarterly newsletter – find out about social justice in the time of a pandemic, recent access to info victories and more
CALS is set to appear in the Palmridge Magistrates Court to defend a woman accused of killing her abusive partner during an incident of domestic violence
The Department of Correctional Services has complied with a court order to release a report on incidents at Mangaung Correctional Centre
We appeared in the High Court last week representing an individual moved to South Africa’s only super maximum security prison for no clear reason
Mervyn King, Chair of the King Committee on Corporate Governance in South Africa has been appointed honorary professor at Wits Business School.
President Cyril Ramaphosa has used this year’s SONA to signal that he understands what needs to be done in order to overcome South Africa’s electricity crisis.
On 19 February the Civil Society Working Group on State Capture will launch a joint submission to the Zondo Commission of Inquiry
The challenge to deliver a persuasive speech comes firstly in the context of intense doubts as to whether President Ramaphosa is truly in charge of the ANC.
The number of users is likely to grow and there are health risks, so now is the time to act.
Today the High Court granted us access to a report into incidents at G4S-run Mangaung Correctional Centre and ordered G4S and the state to pay our costs
CALS will be in the Pretoria High Court on 10 February, arguing that mining communities should be able to access mining rights applications
Join us for a side event at this year's Alternative Mining Indaba hosted in partnership with the Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria
On Friday, 31 January, members of mining affected community networks and civil society groups will hand deliver comments on two important bills to the DMR
Communities call for officials to face jail time and personal costs for consistent failure to provide water in line with court order
The digital economy will, soon, become the ordinary economy as the uptake - and application - of digital technologies in every sector in the world grows.
The deluge of opinions and proposed solutions to South Africa's energy crisis reflects corporate and political interests.
Three Wits students are aiming to secure top positions in a national competition for economics students.
This is an adaptation of a speech given at the BUSA Business Economic Indaba in Sandton on Tuesday 14 January 2020.
With the world facing a climate emergency, higher education institutions should lead in securing a future for our children.
COLUMN: Reflections on former Constitutional Court Justice Edwin Cameron’s critical jurisprudence and the environment.
COLUMN: While there is paralysis from above, exciting new forms of movement-building from below in Africa are saying ‘No to climate genocide!’
Opportunity for South Africa to transition from being a key contributor to global warming to becoming a key contributor to global emissions reductions.
Successful coalition governance ultimately depends on political maturity and the ability to govern across divisions.
Three South African cities run by opposition party coalitions for the past three years have been facing tough times.
CALS appeared in the Constitutional Court today for a landmark judgment that confirms a person can be found guilty of rape on the basis of common purpose
Not all droughts are the same and South Africa needs to have a targeted approach to each type.
Young entrepreneur in the spotlight during Global Entrepreneurship Week running from 18 – 24 November 2019.
Maverick Citizen: Transitional Compass 2 looks at how precarious workers are challenging the practices of the established unions.
South Africa's Department of Water and Sanitation has plans in place to ensure adequate water supply until 2040 and beyond.
Wits Business School Head Dr Sibusiso Sibisito to lead new Artificial Intelligence, Technology and Finance Initiative
Four Wits academics appointed to President Cyril Ramaphosa’s Economic Advisory Council.
25 years ago, citizens hoped a post-apartheid SA would be a fresh start. Today, political and business leaders stand accused of money laundering and bribery.
South Africa's planned NHI has no equivalent in any setting in the world. It's deeply flawed on a number of fronts.
Migration from rural areas to cities can be slowed down with integrated agriculture value chains.
The number of workers employed has actually gone up and the numbers of workers trying to find a job has gone up too.
The roles and practices of companies like Google and Facebook must be investigated.
At the centre of the demands is the communities’ struggle for the industry and government to recognise the right to free prior and informed consent.
Over 40 Wits alumni, students and staff members were included in the 2019 Mail and Guardian Top 200 supplement.
The book, 'The Road to Unfreedom: Russia, Europe, America', helps make sense of the mess the world’s in
Social pacts in agriculture, energy and mining, between business, labour and communities, will be crucial to lift market confidence and growth levels.
The recent squabble over the mandate of the South African Reserve Bank has very little to do with real economic policies.
Countries that use an inflation target to anchor monetary policy pay considerable attention to expectations of future inflation.
Unless the government regulates the economy effectively, it will generate growth that accrues disproportionately to those with wealth and power.
The Law Clinic calls on women trapped in fraudulent marriages to come forward as it prepares legal action against the state.
The School of Accountancy celebrated the excellent results of its top students.
South Africans recently went to the polls in a national election which the African National Congress (ANC) won by a wide margin.
South Africa’s black middle class is growing numerically – and growing politically restive.
Voting for the ANC come the 2019 election will be a calculated but inescapably blindfolded leap of faith for many South African voters.
Witsies are poised to impress at the country’s premier competition for budding economists.
The South African Reserve Bank placed VBS, a small mutual bank, under curatorship in March this year against a backdrop of a serious liquidity crisis.
The 1% point increase in Value Added Tax (VAT) rate this year has raised important questions about how the tax system can and should address inequality.
How is it possible that we can have a society with so much wealth and so much poverty?
It is widely accepted that SA is one of the most unequal societies in the world.
Wits launches first Centre for inequality in the southern hemisphere.