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.

There Will be Blood

Picture: Thousands march on the Durban City Hall to defend dignity and demand land & housing on 16 September 2013 courtesy Abahlali baseMjondolo. Richard Pithouse - Nkosinathi Mngomezulu was shot in the stomach on Saturday morning. He was shot at the Marikana land occupation at Stop 1, Cato Crest in Durban during an eviction. He's currently in the Intensive Care Unit of King Edward Hospital. His comrades fear that he may be attacked in the hospital. They've not been allowed to post their own guard but they're making sure that he's always surrounded by a large group during visiting hours. Mngomezulu's comrades are not paranoid. He's been threatened...

Lessons from the Demise of Thabo Mbeki

Picture: Former President Thabo Mbeki courtesy Esthr/Flickr. Jane Duncan - This month marks one of the most troubling anniversaries of South Africa’s post-apartheid history. On the 21st of September, five years ago, Thabo Mbeki was forced to resign as President of South Africa, a mere nine months before his second term of office expired. He did so following a deeply flawed judgment by Chris Nicholson on the pending trial of Mbeki’s rival for the presidency, Jacob Zuma, and this judgement implicated Mbeki in political interference in the trial. The...

Paranoia Stalks the Halls of Power

Picture: President Jacob Zuma and COSATU President Sdumo Dlamini courtesy GoverntmentZA/Flickr. Richard Pithouse - (T)he paranoid construction is … an attempt to heal ourselves, to pull ourselves out of the real "illness", the "end of the world", the breakdown of the symbolic universe. − Slavoj Zizek, Looking Awry: An Introduction to Jacques Lacan through Popular Culture, 1991 Sdumo Dlamini recently informed listeners of a Jo'burg radio station that a multi-headed snake was slithering through South Africa fermenting dissent against the ANC. In the lead up to Mangaung...

Promise & Peril at the Turn of the Tide

Picture: Mamphela Ramphele (Agang) and Julius Malema (Economic Freedom Fighters) courtesy Wikimedia Commons. Richard Pithouse - (T)he horses have vanished Heroes hop around like toads - Pablo Neruda, Right Comrade, It’s the Hour of the Garden, Chile, 1973 Writing after the French Revolution Immanuel Kant, the German philosopher, noted that “while the drama of great political changes is taking place” people “openly express universal yet disinterested sympathy for one set of protagonists against their adversaries”. Kant did not deny the limits, or even the horrors of the French...

Arms Deal 2: Here We Go Again?

Picture: Photo de l Dale T. McKinley - Justifiably, lots of media and public attention has been given over lately to the continued fallout from the massively corrupt first arms deal. Like a long-term unwanted house guest who simply won’t go away, the first arms deal is still with us almost twenty years after it was first conceived. In immediate terms this is largely due to the various sagas around the Zuma-appointed Seriti Commission of Inquiry which are seemingly once again set to confirm the short-term triumph of personal...

On the Quality of Electioneering in South Africa

Picture: United Nations Photo/Flickr Frank Meintjies - It’s much too early to start election predictions; but it is opportune to discuss the content and quality of electioneering. How parties conduct elections leaves deep marks, for better or worse, on our democracy. It can either highlight or neglect the pertinent issues facing major social groups. It can help grow a democratic culture or weaken it. We need an electioneering process with as much light as heat. We need a lead-up to the actual elections that includes good debate, quality...