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A Short History of South Africa. Republic of South Africa 48 million people: 80% black African, 9% white, 9% Coloured, 2.5% Asian (mainly Indian and Chinese),

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Presentation on theme: "A Short History of South Africa. Republic of South Africa 48 million people: 80% black African, 9% white, 9% Coloured, 2.5% Asian (mainly Indian and Chinese),"— Presentation transcript:

1 A Short History of South Africa

2 Republic of South Africa 48 million people: 80% black African, 9% white, 9% Coloured, 2.5% Asian (mainly Indian and Chinese), 11 official languages recognized by Constitution (Top 5: isiZulu, isiXhosa, Afrikaans, Sepedi, English) Upper-middle-income country by GDP; industrial economy A regional powerhouse, attracting migrants from across southern Africa

3 Hominid Species in Africa

4 Bantu migration from Central Africa Bantu were iron- working farmers Reached South Africa around 1000 CE. Descendents include the present-day Zulu, Sotho, Tswana, and Xhosa

5 Vasco Da Gama’s trip around the Cape of Good Hope, 1497-1499 CE

6 Discovery of diamonds and gold Fueled Anglo-Boer Wars (late 19 th cent), won by the British Prompted migration of young men from across southern Africa to work in the mines and urban areas

7 Apartheid (Afrikaans for separation) Racial segregation existed in colonial times But introduced more formally after the election of the National Party in 1948 Classification of people into 4 racial categories: Black, White, Indian, and Coloured Residential segregation; mixed marriages prohibited (1949); educational segregation (1953) In 1970, Blacks denied political representation and deprived of citizenship in South Africa; instead were citizens of their ethnic “homelands” Pass laws established to regulate Black migration into areas other than the homeland; one could only live there if one had employment (in mines or commercial businesses) Homelands

8 Resistance to Apartheid African National Congress (ANC) played an important role, not always peaceful (some terrorism and military efforts launched from neighboring countries) Schoolchildren a major source of protest 1976 Soweto riots prompted by introduction of Afrikaans language as language of instruction in schools Torture, imprisonment, rigged trials widely used against activists; state of emergency Serious political violence in the townships throughout 1980s (e.g., rent boycotts, militant youth) Violent confrontation; outright war seemed likely before apartheid’s end

9 But instead, a peaceful transition…. Nelson Mandela released from prison, & state of emergency lifted Negotiations between ANC and National Party government 1990-1993; violence between ANC and Zulu Inkatha Party in preparation for democracy Elections of 1994: ANC won 63% of the vote

10 Post-Apartheid Rise of a Black middle class tied to politics and big business But high unemployment: 22% (comparison to US at height of Great Recession: 8%). High poverty rate of 30% in rural areas and townships. According to the GINI index (way of comparing inequality across countries), South Africa is second most unequal country in the world Because a regional powerhouse, many immigrants from across the region, and they are stigmatized and targets of violence Fears of violent crime

11 Gini Coefficient

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