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African Affairs 2005 104(416):493-514; doi:10.1093/afraf/adi009
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© The Author [2005]. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal African Society. All rights reserved

Article

Crime, conflict and politics in transition-era South Africa

Gary Kynoch

Dalhousie University, Canada: gkynoch{at}dal.ca

Abstract

Despite the potentially catastrophic repercussions of South Africa’s violent crime epidemic, little progress has been made in understanding why violence has persisted and even escalated since the end of apartheid in 1994. Adopting an historical approach that highlights the persistence of urban violence throughout the twentieth century, this article focuses on the criminal dimensions of the ‘political’ conflicts of the 1980s and 1990s. The advent of democracy was not in itself sufficient to erase a deeply entrenched culture of violence produced by decades of repressive racial policing, violent crime and social conflict. Moreover, politicized hostilities and the continuing deterioration of law and order structures in the final years of apartheid gave birth to various groups that engaged in criminal violence and provided favourable conditions for well established criminal networks. Such elements were unlikely to put down their guns and relinquish power simply because politicians declared the fighting to be over. Situating transition-era violence within its historic context and broadening the narrow conception of ‘political’ conflict enable us to better understand both this fractious period and the violence that continues to afflict South Africa.


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