9 research outputs found
Mayibuye iAfrika? : disjunctive inclusions and black strivings for constitution and belonging in 'South Africa'
With a focus on South Africa, I employ the phenomenological approach from an African
perspective to analyse strivings for constitution (to constitute an inclusive polity, and etymologically,
constare āto stand togetherā) and belonging (affectively and materially). In this postcolony, these
strivings can be discerned in perennial protests by impoverished black communities for an inclusive
democracy and for social goods; in contestations around land redistribution and against institutionalised
forms of social āinvisibilisation;ā and in calls for the valorisation of life-worlds different from the
western. I contend that these strivings should be understood from the perspective that settler colonial
constitution-making processes presaged ādeath of the landā (ilizwe lifile); that is, the shattering of the
socio-cultural worlds of indigenous peoples. The outcomes of this processes were ānativeā pariahdom,
homelessness and worldlessness. Accordingly, the original impulse of anti-colonial struggles was
Mayibuye iAfrika (āReturnā/āRe-memberā/ āResurrectā Africa).
My two-fold thesis is, firstly, that perennial protests by marginalised communities are impelled
by the fact that post-1994 constitutional re-arrangements did not rise to the decolonisation challenge of
re-membering the land/world. These re-arrangements have thus perpetuated homelessness, pariahdom
and worldlessness. Secondly, I demonstrate that the cause of this failure is partially the fact that ruling
party elites - who were beneficiaries of partial inclusion into the settler-constituted polity - failed to
overcome their liminal-status induced conditions of double consciousness and racial melancholia. The
result is that they elaborated terms of constitution and belonging whose eventual outcomes are, on the
one hand, assimilation of ānativeā elites into the white-dominated world, and on the other, continuing
pariahdom and worldlessness for the majority.
In Part I, I show that South African anti-colonial leaders based their vision of constitution and
belonging on W.E.B. Du Bois seminal manifesto for how people of African descent could achieve
liberation and world-reclamation. I argue that this manifesto leads to elite nationalism, a dearth of
national consciousness and that it ultimately perpetuates the inherited world of apartness. The main
insight from this Part is that quests for post-colonial constitution-making ought to be geared towards
re-membering and (re)constituting the historically-colonised world on spiritual, social and material
planes ā the three realms of African belonging in the world. In Part II, I propose decolonising
constitution-making processes centered on politics of Mayibuye understood here as creolising
homemaking and re-membering of the world. I do this by advancing Esākia Mphahlele, Steve Biko and
Abahlali baseMjondoloās interconnected praxes of Afrikan humanness, Black Consciousness and
Abahlalism. I contend that these praxes are faithful to the Mayibuye exigency because they, respectively
and together, propose ways of re-membering the triadic world and of (re)constituting an all-inclusive
polity based on African humanness
Mayibuye iAfrika? : disjunctive inclusions and black strivings for constitution and belonging in 'South Africa'
With a focus on South Africa, I employ the phenomenological approach from an African
perspective to analyse strivings for constitution (to constitute an inclusive polity, and etymologically,
constare āto stand togetherā) and belonging (affectively and materially). In this postcolony, these
strivings can be discerned in perennial protests by impoverished black communities for an inclusive
democracy and for social goods; in contestations around land redistribution and against institutionalised
forms of social āinvisibilisation;ā and in calls for the valorisation of life-worlds different from the
western. I contend that these strivings should be understood from the perspective that settler colonial
constitution-making processes presaged ādeath of the landā (ilizwe lifile); that is, the shattering of the
socio-cultural worlds of indigenous peoples. The outcomes of this processes were ānativeā pariahdom,
homelessness and worldlessness. Accordingly, the original impulse of anti-colonial struggles was
Mayibuye iAfrika (āReturnā/āRe-memberā/ āResurrectā Africa).
My two-fold thesis is, firstly, that perennial protests by marginalised communities are impelled
by the fact that post-1994 constitutional re-arrangements did not rise to the decolonisation challenge of
re-membering the land/world. These re-arrangements have thus perpetuated homelessness, pariahdom
and worldlessness. Secondly, I demonstrate that the cause of this failure is partially the fact that ruling
party elites - who were beneficiaries of partial inclusion into the settler-constituted polity - failed to
overcome their liminal-status induced conditions of double consciousness and racial melancholia. The
result is that they elaborated terms of constitution and belonging whose eventual outcomes are, on the
one hand, assimilation of ānativeā elites into the white-dominated world, and on the other, continuing
pariahdom and worldlessness for the majority.
In Part I, I show that South African anti-colonial leaders based their vision of constitution and
belonging on W.E.B. Du Bois seminal manifesto for how people of African descent could achieve
liberation and world-reclamation. I argue that this manifesto leads to elite nationalism, a dearth of
national consciousness and that it ultimately perpetuates the inherited world of apartness. The main
insight from this Part is that quests for post-colonial constitution-making ought to be geared towards
re-membering and (re)constituting the historically-colonised world on spiritual, social and material
planes ā the three realms of African belonging in the world. In Part II, I propose decolonising
constitution-making processes centered on politics of Mayibuye understood here as creolising
homemaking and re-membering of the world. I do this by advancing Esākia Mphahlele, Steve Biko and
Abahlali baseMjondoloās interconnected praxes of Afrikan humanness, Black Consciousness and
Abahlalism. I contend that these praxes are faithful to the Mayibuye exigency because they, respectively
and together, propose ways of re-membering the triadic world and of (re)constituting an all-inclusive
polity based on African humanness
Social justice in a time of neo-apartheid constitutionalism : critiquing the anti-black economy of recognition, incorporation and distribution
In this article, I deploy a decolonisation critique to show that apprehended from the lived experiences of South Africaās socially excluded and racially discriminated: this is the time of neoapartheid constitutionalism. By neo-apartheid constitutionalism I mean to convey the fact that post-1994 constitutional re-arrangements are transforming society in ways that do not instantiate a fundamental rupture with the inherited, sedimented and bifurcated social structure in terms of which the majority of black people remain confined in a āzone of non-beingsā. More specifically, I demonstrate that in this time of neo-apartheid the contemporary discourse of social justice, which is transformative constitutionalismās master frame for social emancipation, is complicit in the continuation of this anti-black bifurcated societal structure. A historical survey of the emancipatory politics of anti-apartheid movements serve as a reminder that transformative constitutionalism and social justice have not always been the only emancipatory horizons.
I then demonstrate that the pillars of the contemporary praxis of social justice are fetishisation of human rights, deification of the Constitution, and veneration of civil society. I argue that in historically white supremacist countries, firstly, the human in āhuman rightsā is the conception of humanity imposed during colonisation, and that in the absence of the revolutionary approaches that decolonise āthe humanā, as historically proposed by the PAC and the BCM, the extension of human rights to those historically deemed sub-human is an endeavour to enact transition from the status of sub-humanity to that of being human like the white man without dislodging the edifice of this society of apartness.
Secondly, I show how this idea of the human and of human rights is guaranteed by a deified Constitution that is assimilationist in that it seeks to incorporate the historically conquered into an un-decolonised bifurcated societal structure.
Finally, I show that the veneration of civil society in the context where the realm of civil society is dominated by white people ā who, of necessity, deploy an ahistorical, colour-blind and state-focused notion of social emancipation - entrenches teleological whiteness and deflects attention away from structures of coloniality and racism.This article was developed in the context of the research project āALICE ā Strange Mirrors, Unsuspected Lessonsā, coordinated by Boaventura de Sousa Santos (see http://alice.ces.uc.pt) at the Centre for Social Studies of the University of Coimbra, Portugal. The project is funded by the European Research Council, 7th Framework Program of the European Union (FP/2007-2013)/ERC Grant Agreement [269807].Presented an earlier draft of this article at Thinking Africa Colloquium, Grahamstown on 11 September 2014.http://www.journals.co.za/content/journal/ju_slram2018Jurisprudenc
Post-apartheid social movements and the quest for the elusive āNewā South Africa
The South African Constitution guarantees justiciable socio-economic rights such as the rights to access to housing; to sufficient food and water; to social security and health care services. This ātransformative constitutionā is meant to help rid the country of legacies of apartheid such as huge economic inequalities and entrenched poverty. The government's embrace of neoliberalism has, however, meant that these legacies have not only remained largely untreated but have also become entrenched. Poor communities have started organizing themselves in order to challenge the government's neoliberal policies as well as marginalization from structures of governance. This paper evaluates the nature of these 'social movementsā as well as their impact on democracy and development
Book review: Antje du Bois-Pedain : Transitional Amnesties in South Africa
Transitional Amnesties in South Africa is an expansive analysis of transitional amnesties. Bois-Pedain has offered all of us concerned with issues of transitional justice a comprehensive framing of issues and debates in the field of transitional amnesties. It is certainly a must-read for policy makers, consultants, academics and activists
Approaches To Decolonizing Human Rights Education
The call to decolonize human rights education has gained traction in recent years. In the wake of the COVID-19, it is an opportune time to reflect on human rights learning and teaching in higher education that is intersectional, anti-racist and based on decoloniality