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Ciskei Economics and Politics of Dependence in a South African Homeland Routledge Library Editions: South Africa Series

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateur : Charton Nancy

Originally published in 1980, this book examines the ?self-government? constitution, administrative and party system of The Ciskei which was one of the black ?homelands? created by the government of the Republic of South Africa in its pursuit of ?separate development?. (It has since been reintegrated into South Africa, becoming part of the Eastern Cape Province). The book discusses how, because poverty was endemic and agricultural resources poorly developed the region was dependent on the encapsulating white area for jobs, capital, entrepreneurial skills and markets. It examines how the existence of job opportunities in contiguous white areas has stimulated the growth of black towns, it has also inhibited their development. The book considers the role of the mass media played, illustrating how both traditional oral forms and contemporary mass media depended ultimately on white input and were thus oriented towards white rather than black politics.

1. Introduction 2. Economic Development for the Ciskei 3. Scattered Towns or an Urban System? 4. The Image of Agriculture in Two Ciskeian Rural Communities 5. The Ciskei Constitution 6. The Administrative System in the Ciskei 7. Ethnic Relations in the Ciskei 8. Ciskeian Political Parties 9. The Legislature Nancy Charton 10. Mass Communication in a Transitional Society 11. Maqoma and Ciskeian Politics Today 12. The Economics and Politics of Dependence .

General, Postgraduate, and Undergraduate
Nancy Charton was the first female ordained priest in the Anglican Church of Southern Africa. Charton was a lecturer and later associate professor in the Department of Politics at Rhodes University.