Published in South Africa by:
Wits University Press
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Johannesburg
2001
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Published edition copyright Wits University Press 2010
Compilation copyright Edition editors 2010
Chapter copyright Individual contributors 2010-09-01
First published 2010
ISBN 978-1-86814-518-8
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Cover photograph: Africa Media Online Graeme Williams Protest March
Cover design by Hybridesign
Book design and layout by Sheaf Publishing
Printed and bound by Creda Communications
Contributors
William Beinart is professor of Race Relations at the University of Oxford. In recent years he has been involved in establishing the African Studies Centre and the School of Interdisciplinary Area Studies at Oxford and is currently president of the African Studies Association of the UK. He is author of Twentieth-century South Africa (2001); Rise of Conservation in South Africa (2003); with Lotte Hughes, Environment and Empire (2007); and with Luvuyo Wotshela, Prickly Pear: The Social History of a Plant in South Africa (forthcoming). He is currently researching and supervising on environmental history and popular politics in Southern Africa.
Julian Brown completed a DPhil thesis on Public protest and violence in South Africa, 19481976 at the University of Oxford. He is currently engaged as a post-doctoral research fellow in the NRF Programme in Historical Research, Local Histories and Present Realities, at the University of the Witwatersrand. His research focuses on the development of political and factional identity in the northern Free State.
Tracy Carson began her doctoral studies at Oxford University in 2004 on a British Marshall Scholarship. Upon completion of her DPhil in 2008 she was awarded a US Fulbright Scholarship to continue her research in Cape Town, South Africa. She is currently completing a two-year internship with the US federal government as a Presidential Management Fellow and her first book, Tomorrow It Could Be You: Strikes and Boycotts in South Africa, 19781982, will be published in 2010.
Marcelle C. Dawson works as a senior researcher attached to the South African Research Chair in Social Change at the University of Johannesburg. She obtained a DPhil in Politics from the University of Oxford in 2008. She is a member of the editorial collective of the South African Review of Sociology, the official journal of the South African Sociological Association. Her work has been published in Race, Ethnicity and Education, Journal of Higher Education in Africa, Citizenship Studies and Globalisation and New Identities: A View from the Middle (Jacana Media, 2006). Dawson researches and supervises topics related to social movements, popular protest, service delivery and democracy. Her current projects include the policing of protest in post-apartheid South Africa and southern theorising of social movements.
Tim Gibbs is based at St Antonys College, Oxford, where he is completing his doctoral thesis on nationalism and Transkeis elite during the apartheid period. He took his undergraduate degree at Cambridge University and completed a masters in Development Studies at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, writing a dissertation on the textiles trade unions in Lesotho. His work has been published in the Journal of Southern African Studies.
Rebecca Hodes is deputy director of the AIDS and Society Research Unit at the University of Cape Town. She completed her DPhil at the University of Oxford in 2009. Extracts from her thesis, which focused on HIV on South African television, have been published in the Social History of Medicine and The Culture of AIDS in Africa (Oxford University Press). During 2009, Hodes was the manager of policy, communications and research at the Treatment Action Campaign. Her current research focuses on the responses of HIV activists to the global economic crisis. She is also the co-founder of the Students HIV/AIDS Resistance Campaign (Rhodes University).
Simonne Horwitz graduated with a DPhil from the University of Oxford in 2007. She is currently an assistant professor of History at the University of Saskatchewan, where her major teaching, supervision and research areas are in African History and the History of Medicine. She has published on nursing history in Social History of Medicine, as well as on the history of leprosy in African Studies. Her current research focuses on comparative histories and on the history of HIV/AIDS.
Genevieve Klein was awarded a DPhil from the University of Oxford in 2007 for her thesis, The Anti-Apartheid Movement (AAM) in Britain and support for the African National Congress (ANC), 19761990. Her honours and masters studies were completed at the University of Pretoria with dissertations on Dutch-South African relations during apartheid and the Dutch anti-apartheid movements, respectively. She has published articles on this research in the Journal of Southern African Studies, South African Diaspora Review, and Journal for Contemporary History. Klein is currently a research collaborator at the Department of Historical and Heritage Studies, University of Pretoria.
Mandisa Mbali is a post-doctoral associate in the History of Medicine at Yale University. She obtained her DPhil in Modern History at the University of Oxford in 2009. She has published articles on the political history of AIDS activism in South Africa, AIDS denialism and AIDS policymaking. Mbali is conducting ongoing research on the history of AIDS activism, health activism, public health policy and ethics, migration and health, and the politics of gender and sexuality in Southern Africa.
Kelly Rosenthal completed her undergraduate and honours degrees in Social Anthropology at the University of Cape Town, before moving to Oxford to pursue a masters in African Studies. She is currently completing her doctorate at Oxford in Social Anthropology. Her research focuses on socio-economic rights in post-apartheid South Africa, activism and citizenship.
Chizuko Sato is a research fellow at the Institute of Developing Economies, a parastatal research institute in Chiba, Japan. She obtained a DPhil in politics from the University of Oxford in 2007. Her doctoral dissertation examined the development of land struggles in late twentieth-century KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, focusing on the interactions between liberal activists and black community leaders. She is currently working on a comparative research project on the international migration of nurses from Asia and Africa.