Why did leaders of the Congress movement in South Africa abandon their exclusive reliance on non-violent means in the struggle against apartheid, form an armed unit (Umkhonto we Sizwe), and launch a campaign of spectacular sabotage bombings of symbols of apartheid in 1961? None of the earlier violent struggles from which Congress leaders drew inspiration, and none of the contemporaneous insurgencies against white minority rule elsewhere in southern Africa, involved a similar distinct, preliminary and extended phase of non-lethal symbolic sabotage. Following the 1960 Sharpeville massacre, Congress leaders feared the social and political consequences of increased popular enthusiasm for using violence. Nelson Mandela, Joe Slovo, and the other ...
The thesis discusses the history of a black South African political organisation, the Pan-Africanis...
The Natal Indian Congress (NIC) was revived in 1971 in the context of what has become known as the ‘...
Abstract The Apartheid system can be categorised as one of the worst human rights violations of t...
Why did leaders of the Congress movement in South Africa abandon their exclusive reliance on non-vio...
Published: 29 July 2019Why did leaders of the Congress movement in South Africa abandon their exclus...
The Congress movement in South Africa was transformed in the early 1960s from a movement committed t...
Published online: 04 Oct 2021The Congress movement in South Africa was transformed in the early 1960...
The Congress movement in South Africa was transformed in the early 1960s from a movement committed t...
The international struggle against apartheid that emerged during the second half of the twentieth ce...
The study sets down and assesses the record of organized militant non-violent rejection of the law f...
Based on original archival research and oral history interviews, this article examines how the Briti...
From the mid-1970s until the onset of negotiations to end apartheid in 1990, escalating military con...
By 1980 the National Party government of South Africa and the most prominent anti-apartheid organisa...
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented August 1981During the 1940's under the stimuli of i...
This dissertation is focussed on the re-examination and critique of the veracity of the accepted nar...
The thesis discusses the history of a black South African political organisation, the Pan-Africanis...
The Natal Indian Congress (NIC) was revived in 1971 in the context of what has become known as the ‘...
Abstract The Apartheid system can be categorised as one of the worst human rights violations of t...
Why did leaders of the Congress movement in South Africa abandon their exclusive reliance on non-vio...
Published: 29 July 2019Why did leaders of the Congress movement in South Africa abandon their exclus...
The Congress movement in South Africa was transformed in the early 1960s from a movement committed t...
Published online: 04 Oct 2021The Congress movement in South Africa was transformed in the early 1960...
The Congress movement in South Africa was transformed in the early 1960s from a movement committed t...
The international struggle against apartheid that emerged during the second half of the twentieth ce...
The study sets down and assesses the record of organized militant non-violent rejection of the law f...
Based on original archival research and oral history interviews, this article examines how the Briti...
From the mid-1970s until the onset of negotiations to end apartheid in 1990, escalating military con...
By 1980 the National Party government of South Africa and the most prominent anti-apartheid organisa...
African Studies Seminar series. Paper presented August 1981During the 1940's under the stimuli of i...
This dissertation is focussed on the re-examination and critique of the veracity of the accepted nar...
The thesis discusses the history of a black South African political organisation, the Pan-Africanis...
The Natal Indian Congress (NIC) was revived in 1971 in the context of what has become known as the ‘...
Abstract The Apartheid system can be categorised as one of the worst human rights violations of t...