Democracy & Governance

The relationship between democracy and governance and the realisation of socio-economic rights is an important issue for debate. SACSIS seeks to understand this relationship and identify issues that act as barriers to pro-poor democracy.

Will This Election Offer Real Choices to Most South Africans?

Picture: Abahlali baseMjondolo Steven Friedman - On one level, the question seems ridiculous. All elections offer choices and all of us are allowed to vote. So many parties are likely to appear on this year’s ballot paper that the Independent Electoral Commission might face a serious printing challenge. Isn’t the fact that we can all choose who will govern us from a wide array of parties one of the great achievements of the fight against apartheid? Yes and No. The vote is an essential tool for citizens who want a share in the...

The Wages of the High Life: SA Politicians Getting Fat off the Public Purse

Picture: President Jacob Zuma courtesy GovernmentZA/flickr Dale T. McKinley - If you hadn’t already noticed the ever-expanding waistlines of most of our politicians – a tell-tale sign of a political class feeding feverishly at the public trough - then you might have missed the latest bulging of their other ‘stomach’, salaries. Following enabling recommendations from the ‘Independent Commission for the Remuneration of Public Office Bearers’, President Zuma signed off on the most recent salary hike for the country’s national...

The EFF and the Question of National Unity

Picture: Leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters, Julius Malema, courtesy You Tube screengrab. Jane Duncan - As a new political party, the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) has generated both excitement and criticism in a short space of time. Its commitment to anti-capitalism, anti-imperialism and Fanonianism sets it apart from the gaggle of parties vying for the political centre, and clearly its message has gained traction, especially amongst the youth. Much of the media commentary has focussed on these aspects of its founding manifesto, especially its position on nationalisation, and some on the...

Four Bodies in Three Weeks

Picture: Defence Web Richard Pithouse - Jan Rivombo. Mike Tshele. Osia Rahube. Lerato Seema. Here we are, not even a month into the new year, and the police have already killed four unarmed people during protests. Jan Rivombo sold fruit on the streets of Pretoria. He was killed by the police on Bosman Street as street traders tried to defend their livelihoods against an increasingly brutal and predatory state. He was a young man who had been a father for three months. He was not the first person to be killed by the state in...

Another Annus Horribilis for the ANC?

Picture: President of the country and of the ANC, Jacob Zuma with ANC Deputy Chairperson, Cyril Ramaphosa courtesy GovernmentZA/Flickr. Richard Pithouse - For a long time the ANC was able to sacralise its authority by invoking the key events, ideas and personalities of the struggle like Catholics recite the Stations of the Cross. However we have now reached the point where the power of that political liturgy to inspire and to discipline is in precipitous decline. Patronage and repression have contained some of the fallout. But despite the mobilisation of money and guns to shore up the party’s authority, new heresies, some with their own...

Person of the Year: The Public Protector

Picture: Public Protector, Advocate Thuli Madonsela, courtesy GovernmentZA/Flickr. Dale T. McKinley - While most people in our country as well as across the globe would no doubt agree that the late Nelson Mandela was one of the outstanding persons of the 20th century, when it comes to 2013 here in South Africa there is another individual with Mandela-like qualities who deserves the accolade of ‘Person of the Year’ – Public Protector, Thulisile (Thuli) Madonsela. Whatever we might think of the more specific political and economic legacies bequeathed by the Mandela-era led...