Up Against the Fences. Poverty, Passes and Privilege in South Africa

Primary author
Publisher
David Philip
Place of Publication
Cape Town
Date of Publication
1985
Number of Pages
365
Classification
II Regions and countries | A Africa | za 56 South Africa (Azania)
Description
Edited by Hermann Giliomee and Lawrence Schlemmer
---
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
Languages