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Articles

The cost of belonging: exploring class and citizenship in Soweto's water war

Pages 381-394 | Received 28 Apr 2009, Accepted 22 Jun 2009, Published online: 18 Aug 2010
 

Abstract

More than a decade since the dawn of democracy, South Africa remains one of the most unequal societies in the world. Civil and political citizenship may have – rhetorically at least – reduced the stark racial inequality in the relationship between citizen and state evident under apartheid. Some authors suggest a positive correlation between social citizenship and social equality. However, in post-apartheid South Africa, deep socio-economic inequalities continue to mar the democratic content of society. Although rights to welfare and social services are nominally in place and are enshrined in the constitution, scores of poor, black South Africans are unable to claim social citizenship, precisely as a result of their class position. Using, as a lens, community struggles in Soweto against the commodification of water, this article seeks to explore the relationship between citizenship and class. It does this by addressing the relationship between the state and its citizens within the context of service delivery, paying particular attention to the impact of prepaid water meters and to the strategies that were employed by community movements in Soweto's ‘water war’. The key argument is that under the system of capitalism, class inequality will persist regardless of the extent of citizenship.

Notes

1. The ruling African National Congress has an historic partnership with the Congress of South African Trade Unions and the South African Communist Party, which together form the Tripartite Alliance.

2. The corporatised utility responsible for delivering the city's water services.

3. Zulu for ‘conserve water’.

4. About US$12.

5. A township situated approximately 45 kilometres south of Johannesburg.

6. Approximately US$90.

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