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Dive into the research topics where Marota Aphane is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Marota Aphane.


African Journal of AIDS Research | 2015

Reducing the overall HIV-burden in South Africa: is reviving ABC an appropriate fit for a complex adaptive epidemiological HIV landscape?

Christopher J. Burman; Marota Aphane; Peter Delobelle

This article questions the recommendations to ‘revive ABC (abstain, be faithful, condomise)’ as a mechanism to ‘educate’ people in South Africa about HIV prevention as the South African National HIV Prevalence, Incidence and Behaviour Survey, 2012, suggests. We argue that ABC was designed as a response to a particular context which has now radically changed. In South Africa the contemporary context reflects the mass roll-out of antiretroviral treatment; significant bio-medical knowledge gains; a generalised population affected by HIV that has made sense of and embodied those diverse experiences; and a government committed to confronting the epidemic. We suggest that the situation can now be plausibly conceptualised as a complex, adaptive epidemiological landscape that could benefit from an expansion of the existing, ‘descriptive’ prevention paradigm towards strategies that focus on the dynamics of transmission. We argue for this shift by proposing a theoretical framework based on complexity theory and pattern management. We interrogate one educational prevention heuristic that emphasises the importance of risk-reduction through the lens of transmission, called A-3B-4C-T. We argue that this type of approach provides expansive opportunities for people to engage with the epidemic in contextualised, innovative ways that supersede the opportunities afforded by ABC. We then suggest that framing the prevention imperative through the lens of ‘dynamic prevention’ at scale opens more immediate opportunities, as well as developing a future-oriented mind-set, than the ‘descriptive prevention’ parameters can facilitate. The parameters of the ‘descriptive prevention’ paradigm, that maintain — and partially reinforce — the presence of ABC, do not have the flexibility required to develop the armamentarium of tools required to contribute to the management of a complex epidemiological landscape. Uncritically adhering to both the ‘descriptive paradigm’, and ABC, represents an historically dislocated form of prevention — with restrictive options for reducing the overall burden of HIV-related challenges in South Africa.


African Journal of AIDS Research | 2015

Re-imagining decision making: addressing a discrete social driver of HIV/ AIDS through the lens of complexity science

Christopher J. Burman; Linda Moerschell; Robert Mamabolo; Marota Aphane; Peter Delobelle

This article argues that decision making is a discrete social driver that can be associated with the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the Limpopo province in South Africa. The authors argue that complexity science can inform future research and interventions by presenting two decision making frameworks arising out of complexity science that have the potential to enable young people to better negotiate decision-making contexts whilst simultaneously opening spaces of dialogue that can mitigate the impact of HIV-risk in specific, punctuated contexts. The methodological design was prompted by findings from youth-oriented community engagement projects that include Communication Conversations and Sex & Relationships Education. The proposed methods have the potential to exploit the phenomenon of leadership emergence as a product of decision making at critical moments. This has the potential to promote the growth of home-grown leadership skill sets that make sense to young people and to enable them better manage their own health, thus reducing risk and vulnerability to HIV infection and sexual violence.


Sahara J-journal of Social Aspects of Hiv-aids | 2016

Weak signal detection: A discrete window of opportunity for achieving ‘Vision 90:90:90’?

Christopher J. Burman; Marota Aphane; Peter Delobelle

Abstract Introduction: UNAIDS’ Vision 90:90:90 is a call to ‘end AIDS’. Developing predictive foresight of the unpredictable changes that this journey will entail could contribute to the ambition of ‘ending AIDS’. There are few opportunities for managing unpredictable changes. We introduce ‘weak signal detection’ as a potential opportunity to fill this void. Method: Combining futures and complexity theory, we reflect on two pilot case studies that involved the Archetype Extraction technique and the SenseMaker® Collector™ tool. Results: Both the piloted techniques have the potentials to surface weak signals – but there is room for improvement. Discussion: A management response to a complex weak signal requires pattern management, rather than an exclusive focus on behaviour management. Conclusion: Weak signal detection is a window of opportunity to improve resilience to unpredictable changes in the HIV/AIDS landscape that can both reduce the risk that emerges from the changes and increase the visibility of opportunities to exploit the unpredictable changes that could contribute to ‘ending AIDS’.


African Journal of AIDS Research | 2016

Leadership emergence: the application of the Cynefin framework during a bio-social HIV/AIDS risk-reduction pilot.

Christopher J. Burman; Marota Aphane

This article focuses on the utility of a knowledge management heuristic called the Cynefin framework, which was applied during an ongoing pilot intervention in the Limpopo province, South Africa. The intervention aimed to identify and then consolidate low-cost, innovative bio-social responses to reinforce the biomedical opportunities that now have the potential to “end AIDS by 2030″. The Cynefin framework is designed to enable leaders to identify specific decision-making domain typologies as a mechanism to maximise the effectiveness of leadership responses to both opportunities and challenges that emerge during interventions. In this instance the Cynefin framework was used to: (1) provide an indication to the project managers whether the early stages of the intervention had been effective; (2) provide the participants an opportunity to identify emergent knowledge action spaces (opportunities and challenges); and (3) categorise them into appropriate decision-making domains in preparation for the next phases of the intervention. A qualitative methodology was applied to collect and analyse the findings. The findings indicate that applying the Cynefin framework enabled the participants to situate knowledge action spaces into appropriate decision-making domains. From this participatory evaluation a targeted management strategy was developed for the next phases of the initiative. The article concludes by arguing that the Cynefin framework was an effective mechanism for situating emergent knowledge action spaces into appropriate decision-making domains, which enabled them to prepare for the next phases of the intervention. This process of responsive decision making could have utility in other development related interventions.


The Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa | 2013

The South African developmental landscape: restricted potentials or expansive, complex adaptive opportunities?

Christopher J. Burman; Robert Mamabolo; Marota Aphane; P Lebese; Peter Delobelle


SAHARA-J | 2015

Expanding the prevention armamentarium portfolio: A framework for promoting HIV-Conversant Communities within a complex, adaptive epidemiological landscape

Christopher J. Burman; Marota Aphane; Oliver Mtapuri; Peter Delobelle


South African Medical Journal | 2016

Complex adaptive HIV/AIDS risk reduction: Plausible implications from findings in Limpopo Province South Africa.

Chris J Burman; Marota Aphane


Systemic Practice and Action Research | 2017

Complex HIV/AIDS Landscapes: Reflections on How ‘Path Creation’ Influenced an Action-Oriented Intervention

Christopher J. Burman; Marota Aphane


Archive | 2018

Poetic Encounter: Rhapsodies from the South

Marota Aphane; Oliver Mtapuri


Educational Research for Social Change | 2016

Knowledge as enablement: additional perspectives influenced by complexity

Christopher J. Burman; Marota Aphane; Naftali Mollel

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Peter Delobelle

University of the Western Cape

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P Lebese

University of Limpopo

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Linda Moerschell

State University of New York at Potsdam

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