Abstract
Drawing on a wide range of theoretical and empirical studies, the articles in this special issue examine issues of citizenship and belonging in South Africa. Questions of belonging and citizenship are neither novel, nor particular to South Africa – they have been high on the intellectual (and popular) agenda internationally since at least the early 1990s. Yet South Africa's history of artificially separating and defining its citizens in the racial regimes of colonialism and apartheid still reverberates today, as is reflected in the continued inequalities marring South African society. Post-apartheid governance of redress still requires the use of apartheid categories of ‘race’, but the terms under which we understand what it means to be South African are much wider, and require continued critical reflection. Using South Africa (and not the global North, as is so often the case) as the focal point for rethinking notions of citizenship and belonging, may urge us to rethink these notions and their meanings within fledgling democracies and societies in transition.
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Notes on contributors
Viola Candice Milton
viola candice milton is associate professor in the Department of Communication Science, Unisa. [email protected].
Herman Wasserman
Herman Wasserman is professor in the School of Journalism and Media Studies, Rhodes University. [email protected].
Anthea Garman
Anthea Garman is associate professor in the School of Journalism and Media Studies, Rhodes University. [email protected].