Showing posts with label Ashley Westaway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ashley Westaway. Show all posts
Thursday, 15 November 2012
Wednesday, 16 May 2012
Bare Life in the Bantustans (of the Eastern Cape): Re-membering the. Centennial South African Nation-State
by Ashley Westaway, 2008
This thesis argues that 1994 did not mark a point of
absolute discontinuity in the history of South Africa. More specifically, it
asserts that 1994 did not signal the end of segregationism; instead of
democracy leading to national integration, the Bantustans are still governed
and managed differently from the rest of the country. Consequently, it is no surprise
that they remain mired in pervasive, debilitating poverty fifteen years after
1994. In insisting that contemporary South Africa is old (rather than new), the
thesis seeks to make a contribution to political struggles that aim to bring to
an end the segregationist past-in-the-present.
Tuesday, 27 March 2012
Rural poverty in the Eastern Cape Province: Legacy of apartheid or consequence of contemporary segregationism?
Ashley Westaway, Development South Africa, 2012
Poverty in South Africa in general has not
declined since 1994, and it is particularly severe in the former
Bantustans. This paper discusses two important issues related to rural
poverty in the Eastern Cape Province. It questions the applicability of
the notion of legacy to explain recent trends in rural poverty and
constructs an argument that explains these trends in relation to
post-1994 segregationism. It argues that the notion of legacy is not
useful in explaining why rural poverty remains entrenched, long after
1994. Rural poverty today cannot be explained as something left behind
after the end of apartheid, because its causes and drivers are the same
now in 2012 as they were in 1970. The continuity between the pre- and
post-1994 periods is best described by exploring and understanding
post-1994 policy decisions and power configurations as an expression of
contemporary segregationism.
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