Africana Library

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    Continuities and changes: a survey of Soweto in the late 1990s, focusing on key demographic indicators and physical living conditions.
    (University of the Witwatersrand. History Workshop., 1999-09-18) Morris, Alan
    This paper is the findings of a household survey of Soweto conducted by Wits Sociology Department in January 1997. It surveys the population size, age profile, employment rates, education, income, dwelling sizes and population density of the people living there.
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    The class-blind approach to South African schooling: A reappraisal
    (1985-10) Morris, Alan
    This paper's primary endeavour is to redress partially a pervasive tendency in analyses of South African schooling. This tendency involves deemphasizing or neglecting the crucial role that social class plays in shaping the pedagogical process and academic achievement in the schools. This deemphasis takes two forms: either social class is ignored and the emphasis is placed solely on the racist structuring of the educational system or alternatively social class is taken cognizance of but is conflated with race. The main argument of this paper is that both approaches seriously hamper our ability to understand the dynamics of schooling in the South African social formation and that to understand the pedagogical processes operating in the schools cognizance has to be taken of social class as a central factor interacting with/ but concomifantly distinct from race.
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    The complexities of sustained urban struggle: The case of Oukasie
    (1990-06) Morris, Alan
    On the 7 December 1985, the local community council, elected in a low poll in 1981, summonsed Oukasie residents to a fateful meeting. The residents were informed that they would have to move 24 kilometres north to Lethlabile on the border of Bophuthatswana. The 55 year-old township of approximately 12 000 people situated 90 kilometres north-west of Johannesburg and two kilometres from the Brits town centre was to be demolished. This paper will briefly reconstruct the history of the anti-removal struggle in Oukasie and in the process illustrate the potential difficulties of township struggle. Three key arguments are made. Firstly, it is argued that in order to understand the different responses of Oukasie residents to the planned removal, cognizance must be taken of the fact that like all townships, Oukasie at the time of the announcement, was composed of different social classes and groupings with different material interests and perceptions. Only by taking cognizance of this can the issue of why some residents decided to move and others decided to stay be explained. Secondly, it is argued that the occupation of key leadership positions by unemployed residents fueled the development of vanguardist organisation. Finally, it is argued that this vanguardism, in the context of high and lengthy unemployment, contributed to the rise of factionalism and coercive politics.