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- Title
Terrains of Civil and Uncivil Society in Post-Apartheid Durban.
- Authors
Bond, Patrick; Mottiar, Shauna
- Abstract
Post-apartheid Durban civil society politics reflects not only durable anti-racist activism, but primarily, Karl Polanyi's pendulum of a 'double movement' of the market against people and environment on the one hand, and social backlashes against neoliberalism on the other. The most important movements and campaigns of a socioeconomic nature can be summarised as follows: local resistance to economic disempowerment and lack of service delivery in various trade union strikes (1994-present), South Durban's fight against polluters and the port's expansion (1996-present), Chatsworth's water and electricity battles (1999-2012), the Treatment Action Campaign's access to AIDS medicines (early 2000s), Abahlali baseMjondolo's anti-eviction campaigns (2005-present), the defence of the Early Morning Market (2009-10), the Umlazi Occupy (2012), and sporadic community protests throughout. Resistance has occurred in urban poor neighbourhoods and townships and also penetrated the Durban inner city and university campuses. Durban activists' tactics range from militant protests to 'occupation' of space ranging from townships to the Speaker's Corner next to the Convention Centre, innovative door-to-door campaigning and court action. While the limits of single-issue and often assimilationist civil society politics are becoming obvious in one of the world's most unequal cities, there still has not yet been a successful 'united front' project to fuse interests, in part due to ideological division and the geographical diffusion of dissent.
- Subjects
CIVIL society; APARTHEID; ANTI-racism; SOCIOECONOMICS; TREATMENT Action Campaign; PUBLIC demonstrations
- Publication
Urban Forum, 2018, Vol 29, Issue 4, p383
- ISSN
1015-3802
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s12132-018-9351-6