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American gospel artistes to grace Zim – NewsDay

AWARD-WINNING American contemporary musical group Maverick City Music and multi-award winner songwriter, singer and choir director Kirk Franklin will enhance the country’s gospel experience in a tour dubbed the Kingdom World Tour.

AWARD-WINNING American contemporary musical group Maverick City Music and multi-award winner songwriter, singer and choir director Kirk Franklin will enhance the country’s gospel experience in a tour dubbed the Kingdom World Tour.

The Kingdom Tour set to start on  August 12 at the Glamis Arena in Harare will see the gospel musicians touring Africa, Europe and Asia for unforgettable experiences and an encounter with God.

Founded in 2018 by Tony Brown along with Jonathan Jay in Atlanta, Maverick City made music that spoke and resonated with many people in the gospel circle releasing songs such as Promises, Jireh, Million Little Miracles, The Story I Will Tell, For My Good, Sufficient For Today and Man Of Your Word, among others.

The group was created to break down the unspoken rules in contemporary Christian music and the gospel world while giving a voice to those without a platform for their worship to be heard and shared.

Maverick City Music scooped awards in four categories it was nominated for at the prestigious Grammy Awards last year in the categories of Best Gospel Performance/Song, Best Gospel Album, Best Contemporary Christian Music Album and Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song.

Meanwhile Kirk Franklin, a decorated gospel musician, who has won many awards including several Grammys and BET awards and fuses hip-hop rhythms with religious messages, will perform with Maverick City.

He is best known for leading urban contemporary gospel and Christian R&B ensembles such as The Family, God’s Property and One Nation Crew, among several others.

His discography includes My Life Is In Your Hands, Wanna Be Happy, Love Theory, Hello Fear, But The Blood and Everyone Hurts, among others.

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Pioneering Research Offers Hope Against Crop Diseases – Seed World

Exploring 50 years of advancements in plant immunity, a new study highlights groundbreaking solutions to combat the threats facing vital crops like wheat, bananas and coffee.

Diseases impacting crop plants have profoundly influenced human history and continue to pose significant challenges in our quest to sustainably cultivate the essential crops that feed, clothe, and sustain us. From wheat and bananas to coffee and cacao, a broad spectrum of crucial crops are under threat from diseases, with risks expected to escalate as climate change progresses.

In their latest publication titled “The plant immune system: From discovery to deployment,” featured in the esteemed journal Cell, IGI Director of Sustainable Agriculture Brian Staskawicz, alongside Jonathan D.G. Jones of the University of East Anglia and Jeffery L. Dangl from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, encapsulates a half-century of milestones in plant immunity research. The trio, renowned for their significant contributions to the field, have been instrumental in several technological breakthroughs over the years, including the development and application of CRISPR genome editing in plants.

“As I look back over the last 50 years, I am amazed and proud of the progress that the molecular plant-microbe interactions research community has made to uncover the molecular basis of plant disease resistance,” Staskawicz shared as he reflected on this journey in a University of California-Berkeley news release.

“Personally, I am grateful to my international colleagues, and especially to my students and postdocs at UC Berkeley who have substantially contributed to progress in this area,” he added. “Finally, our ability to translate these discoveries to create sustainable plant disease-resistance solutions to feed the world has become a reality.”

For a deeper dive into how these breakthroughs are forging paths towards sustainable agriculture, read more in Cell.

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Uganda: Business and Management Graduates Can Become Climate Change and Sustainability Champions – Lessons From Uganda and Tanzania On How Universities Can Support This – AllAfrica – Top Africa News

There is no doubt about it: the world is in the grips of a climate crisis. The headlines are full of reports about extreme weather events and the negative effects of the fossil fuel industry.

This reality means that anyone entering the worlds of business or management today needs to understand climate change. They need the right skills and attitudes to build sustainable enterprises, and to contribute to climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts.

I am a lecturer in management with a particular interest in sustainability and climate change education. Recently I conducted a study at two higher education institutions: Makerere University in Uganda and the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania. They are two of the continent’s largest and most respected universities.

I wanted to know how climate change and sustainability education were integrated into their various faculties’ programmes.

The answer? Not very much at all. Students, faculty and administrators all recognised this as a shortcoming. There was a strong sense that sustainability and climate change education should be woven into faculties’ curricula, research and community engagement programmes. But they’ve not yet done so, most often because none of their academic staff are trained in these issues.

Given my research and teaching interests, I was especially interested in how business and management schools were performing in this area. Sadly, they are as behind the curve as other faculties I studied.

I suggest that the continent’s business and management schools are missing a valuable opportunity. Who is better to instil the necessary attitudes, knowledge and skills than business and management schools? They produce many graduates who join various public, private and voluntary organisations and agencies and become influential professionals in these sectors. With the right training, those graduates can become the kind of sustainability champions the world needs today.

The study

My study explored the perspectives and views of lecturers, administrators and students in two academic units, on their institutions’ existing climate change and sustainability education. I asked where they thought they were doing well. I also wanted them to identify the gaps in training, curriculum and research. Participants were encouraged to think about how their institutions could do better.

At both institutions, only academic units within the natural science disciplines had programmes and courses on climate change and sustainability. No such programmes were offered by the arts and social sciences, education, or business and management faculties.

Based on what academics, administrators and students told me, I have devised ideas for what African business and management schools at universities should do, and how, to become champions of sustainability and climate change education.

Getting started

This doesn’t involve reinventing the wheel.

The faculty and students in these schools are already conducting scientific research. More emphasis could be placed on research that relates to climate change and sustainability.

Business and management schools are often already supporting communities based on their research. They are also constantly looking for solutions to community challenges across sectors. They could use their existing community outreach and engagement programmes to support and encourage communities on climate change adaptation options and sustainability-friendly practices.

Working with small artisans, retail shop owners and market vendors to create awareness of climate change and sustainability-friendly business practices can significantly contribute to climate action and sustainability.

However, there will need to be some bigger shifts alongside tweaks to existing outputs and programmes.

Policy recommendations

I have several recommendations for policymakers and decision-makers in business and management training institutions. Here are some of them:

  1. Mainstream and integrate climate change and sustainability education in all the school’s academic programmes.
  2. Integrate sustainability practices in governance and management policies, systems and operations. For example, administrators might consider how to use energy and water sustainably. They could get involved in efforts to green the wider campus. Non-motorised transport systems could be introduced to ensure fewer vehicles are used on campus.
  3. Integrate sustainability indicators within the performance management system for staff and institutional departments. This will encourage staff and units to establish activities that promote climate action and sustainability on campus and in the communities they work with.
  4. Encourage faculty and students to conduct research on climate change and sustainability issues.
  5. Organise events and engage policymakers to disseminate research findings and policy recommendations on climate change and sustainability issues.

There is also a role for national governments and regulators here. In Uganda, for instance, the National Council for Higher Education should integrate sustainability indicators in its assessment of institutions. This is a way to encourage business and management schools to promote sustainability. It’s also a great opportunity for schools and institutions to learn from each other about what works and what doesn’t.

David Ssekamatte, Lecturer in the Department of Management, Uganda Management Institute

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Sovereignty & Supremacy: Zim’s Constitutional Framework | Dzikamai Bere – The Zimbabwean

Dzikamai Bere

In this edition, Communications Specialist, Tapiwa Zivira interviews Dzikamai Bere, National Director at the Zimbabwe Human Rights Association.

During the interview, Bere highlighted the importance of the expanded Bill of Rights for their organization, as it includes all generations of human rights, including social, economic, environmental, and cultural rights. He also emphasized the need to defend the Constitution against threats, as politicians may try to tear it apart. Bere mentioned the Hands Off the People’s Constitution campaign that was launched in 2021 as a way to organize and protect the Constitution.

Bere also discussed the principle of separation of powers and the importance of checks and balances in the three arms of government: legislature, executive, and judiciary. He stressed the need for these arms to be independent of each other to prevent abuse of power. Additionally, Bere highlighted the sovereignty of the people of Zimbabwe, which is established in the preamble of the constitution and linked to the supremacy of the document.

An interesting point raised by Bere was the reminder of the sovereignty of the people in the establishment of each arm of government. For example, in section 8.8.1 of the constitution, it states that executive authority derives from the people of Zimbabwe. This serves as a reminder that the power ultimately resides in the hands of the people.

Bere also spoke about the importance of the Bill of Rights in the electoral process, stating that elections should not just be about positions, but also delivering on the obligations set out in the constitution. To emphasize this, the Zimbabwe Human Rights Association launched the People’s Human Rights Manifesto in April 2023, outlining ten key asks based on the Bill of Rights. This event was attended by five major political parties in Zimbabwe.

Post published in: Featured

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