Author(s)
Primary author
Publisher
David Philip
Place of Publication
Cape Town
Date of Publication
1985
Number of Pages
365
Subjects
Classification
II Regions and countries | A Africa | za 56 South Africa (Azania)
Description
Edited by Hermann Giliomee and Lawrence Schlemmer
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Introduction. The influx control fence
Nattrass: The dynamics of black rural poverty in South Africa
Møller: Change in the South African labour migration system: a phase model
Giliomee: The changing political functions of the homelands
Wilson: Mineral wealth and rural poverty: an analysis of the economic foundations of the political boundaries in southern Africa
Greenberg and Giliomee: Managing influx control from the rural end: the black homelands and the underbelly of privilege.
Bernstein: Influx control in urban South Africa: an international and empirical view
Schlemmer: The fence of opportunity: influx control and black reactions in South Africa
Smit: The process of black urbanisation
Schlemmer and Møller: Constraint, stress and reaction: the responses of migrant contract workers to their situation
Møller and Schlemmer: Migrant workers: a profile of their rural resources
Schlemmer: Squatter communities: safety valves in the rural-urban nexus
Van der Berg: An overview of development in the homelands
McCarthy: Industrial decentralisation and employment creation
Maasdorp: Co-ordinated regional development: hope for the Good Hope proposals?
Tapson: The agricultural potential of the homelands: problems and prospects
Zulu: The rural crisis: authority structures and their role in develeopment
Charton: Resettlement in the Ciskei
Dhlomo: The KwaZulu government's response to resettlement
Tutu: The plight of the resettled and other rural poor: the stand of the church
Rosholt: Urbanisation and the private sector: the need for a new approach
Oppenheimer: Reflections on the government's industrial decentralisation policy
Relly: Influx control and economic growth
Godsell: The reform process in South Africa: some thoughts about the relationship betewwn government and private sector.
Giliomee: The inplications of the rural crisis for the State and business in South Africa
Schlemmer: The social benefits and costs of influx control in South Africa
---
Avoiding the crisis
---
Introduction. The influx control fence
Nattrass: The dynamics of black rural poverty in South Africa
Møller: Change in the South African labour migration system: a phase model
Giliomee: The changing political functions of the homelands
Wilson: Mineral wealth and rural poverty: an analysis of the economic foundations of the political boundaries in southern Africa
Greenberg and Giliomee: Managing influx control from the rural end: the black homelands and the underbelly of privilege.
Bernstein: Influx control in urban South Africa: an international and empirical view
Schlemmer: The fence of opportunity: influx control and black reactions in South Africa
Smit: The process of black urbanisation
Schlemmer and Møller: Constraint, stress and reaction: the responses of migrant contract workers to their situation
Møller and Schlemmer: Migrant workers: a profile of their rural resources
Schlemmer: Squatter communities: safety valves in the rural-urban nexus
Van der Berg: An overview of development in the homelands
McCarthy: Industrial decentralisation and employment creation
Maasdorp: Co-ordinated regional development: hope for the Good Hope proposals?
Tapson: The agricultural potential of the homelands: problems and prospects
Zulu: The rural crisis: authority structures and their role in develeopment
Charton: Resettlement in the Ciskei
Dhlomo: The KwaZulu government's response to resettlement
Tutu: The plight of the resettled and other rural poor: the stand of the church
Rosholt: Urbanisation and the private sector: the need for a new approach
Oppenheimer: Reflections on the government's industrial decentralisation policy
Relly: Influx control and economic growth
Godsell: The reform process in South Africa: some thoughts about the relationship betewwn government and private sector.
Giliomee: The inplications of the rural crisis for the State and business in South Africa
Schlemmer: The social benefits and costs of influx control in South Africa
---
Avoiding the crisis
Copy Number
1
Identifier
II A 56 GIL reg17271
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