Results 201 to 210 of about 2,040 (243)
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South Africa: Anti-Apartheid NGOs in Transition
Voluntas: International Journal of Voluntary and Nonprofit Organizations, 1999Under apartheid, there were an ever-increasing number of nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) concerned about challenging the South African state and furthering a nonracial democratic society. In the 1990s, with the transition to an African National Congress-led democratic government, these organizations underwent profound changes.
Adam Habib, Rupert Taylor
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Tijdschrift voor Geschiedenis, 2011
This article examines how the politics of apartheid manifested itself in networks that linked South Africa with the Netherlands. It examines the transfer of narratives, images, ideas, and political practices within a transnational kinship network, as well as through a network of political activists.
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This article examines how the politics of apartheid manifested itself in networks that linked South Africa with the Netherlands. It examines the transfer of narratives, images, ideas, and political practices within a transnational kinship network, as well as through a network of political activists.
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Anti-Apartheid: The Black British Response
South African Historical Journal, 2012Although histories have been written about the transnational character of the anti-apartheid solidarity movement, thus far little has been written about the black voices raised in solidarity in Europe or in Britain, arguably the centre of the international anti-apartheid movement.
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Introduction: Anti-Apartheid in Global History
2019We define global history as an ‘approach’ that seeks to analyse the process of globalisation, which requires the assessment of different scales of integration, contacts, and exchanges that transcend and by-pass local or national borders and have an impact on societies and states. As such, global history focuses on the channels through which connections
Anna Konieczna, Rob Skinner
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Abstract In June 1984, Margaret Thatcher hosted P. W. Botha, the Prime Minister of apartheid South Africa, on a state visit to London. The visit provoked intense opposition from the anti-apartheid movement in London, and a major demonstration was held to protest against the visit.
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Epilogue: The Legacy of Anti-Apartheid
2006On 10 May 1994, in the wake of South Africa’s first democratic elections, the presidential installation of Nelson Mandela was celebrated. It took place in front of the Union Buildings in Pretoria, the administrative centre of the apartheid State from 1948, the same year that the UN Declaration of Human Rights was announced.
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Biblical Mythology in Andr� Brink's Anti-Apartheid Crusade
Research in African Literatures, 2000cated how the writing of Ralph Standish (1612), which represents the black as a subhuman and mythical other, is representative of a long tradition of colonial writing, spanning the works of John Jordain (1608), Hondius (1652), Kolb (1719), Mentzel (1785), Barrow (1801), and Philip (1828), all aimed at the justification of European colonization.
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Narratives of Transnational Anti-Apartheid Activism
2006Although networks, as well as social movements, are collective phenomena, it is important not to underestimate the role of individuals in the processes of their construction. Particularly in movements and networks that span over large distances, key activists play an important role through connecting different historical, cultural and political ...
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