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Periodical article Periodical article Leiden University catalogue Leiden University catalogue WorldCat catalogue WorldCat
Title:Migration, xenophobia and security-making in post-apartheid South Africa
Author:Vale, PeterISNI
Year:2002
Periodical:Politikon: South African Journal of Political Studies
Volume:29
Issue:1
Pages:7-29
Language:English
Geographic term:South Africa
Subject:immigration
External link:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02589340220149416
Abstract:This article focuses on the ideological conceptualization, and brutal treatment, of foreign migrants in post-apartheid South Africa. Notwithstanding the sacrifices of Africa's people to the cause of South Africa's liberation or the reality that South Africa was made by migrants, foreign African migrants in 'liberated' and 'democratic' South Africa have been subjected to a regime of violent othering. Contribution to this rising tide of xenophobia, the so-called 'think-tank' arm of the security industry has woven a discourse around the idea that migration to South Africa constitutes a threat to national security which, in turn, has watered the notion that post-apartheid South Africa needs a powerful, modern and well-armed military. The end result is that the received understandings of the apartheid era as to what constitutes the State and its security have been neither changed nor discarded, but reinvented and reinforced, in what was once imagined would be a new beginning to thinking about security in this region. Notes, ref., sum. (Journal abstract)
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