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From Revolution To Rights In South Africa Social Movements Ngos And Popular Politics After Apartheid Reprint Steven L Robins

  • SKU: BELL-1904050
From Revolution To Rights In South Africa Social Movements Ngos And Popular Politics After Apartheid Reprint Steven L Robins
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From Revolution To Rights In South Africa Social Movements Ngos And Popular Politics After Apartheid Reprint Steven L Robins instant download after payment.

Publisher: James Currey
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.68 MB
Pages: 208
Author: Steven L. Robins
ISBN: 9781847012012, 1847012019
Language: English
Year: 2010
Edition: Reprint

Product desciption

From Revolution To Rights In South Africa Social Movements Ngos And Popular Politics After Apartheid Reprint Steven L Robins by Steven L. Robins 9781847012012, 1847012019 instant download after payment.

Critics of liberalism in Europe and North America argue that a stress on 'rights talk' and identity politics has led to fragmentation, individualisation and depoliticisation. But are these developments really signs of 'the end of politics'? In the post-colonial, post-apartheid, neo-liberal new South Africa poor and marginalised citizens continue to struggle for land, housing and health care. They must respond to uncertainty and radical contingencies on a daily basis. This requires multiple strategies, an engaged, practised citizenship, one that links the daily struggle to well organised mobilisation around claiming rights. Robins argues for the continued importance of NGOs, social movements and other 'civil society' actors in creating new forms of citizenship and democracy. He goes beyond the sanitised prescriptions of 'good governance' so often touted by development agencies. Instead he argues for a complex, hybrid and ambiguous relationship between civil society and the state, where new negotiations around citizenship emerge. Steven L. Robins is Professor of Social Anthropology in the University of Stellenbosch and editor of Limits to Liberation after Apartheid (James Currey). Southern Africa: University of KwaZulu-Natal Press (PB)

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