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ID179121
Title ProperIntimate crimes
Other Title Information heroin and the rise of amaphara in South Africa
LanguageENG
AuthorHunter, Mark
Summary / Abstract (Note)The term ‘amaphara’, possibly derived from ‘parasites’, burst into South African public culture in the 2010s to refer to petty thieves addicted to a heroin-based drug locally called whoonga/nyaope. Drawing on ethnography and media sources to interrogate the rise of ‘amaphara’, this paper argues that South Africa's heroin epidemic magnifies the attention – criticism but also sympathy – directed toward marginalised black men who have few prospects for social mobility. It locates amaphara in the national context where drug policy is largely punitive and youth unemployment rates are painfully high, but gives particular attention to families’ and communities’ experiences with intimate crimes, especially petty thefts. It further shows that amaphara is a contested term: heroin users are brothers, sons and grandchildren and they gain most of their income not from crime but by undertaking useful piece work in communities.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of Modern African Studies Vol. 59, No.1; Mar 2021: p.59 - 79
Journal SourceJournal of Modern African Studies 2021-03 59, 1
Key WordsCrime ;  South Africa ;  Unemployment ;  Heroin ;  Family Support