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ID193270
Title ProperCommentary – the state of human rights in south africa approaching 30 years of post-apartheid democracy: successes, failures, and prospects
LanguageENG
AuthorSchimmel, Noam
Summary / Abstract (Note)As South Africa approaches 30 years of democracy, it is important to pause to reflect and analyze the trajectory of human rights since the fall of the apartheid regime and the advent of multiracial democracy. Although there was a large global movement against apartheid, this movement's vigilance for human rights in South Africa quickly declined and dissolved with the advent of South African democracy. There is little critical engagement with South Africa's contemporary human rights record and policies by global human rights activists, nongovernmental organizations, and civil society and still less active campaigning in defense of the human rights of South Africans, especially South Africa's most vulnerable and disadvantaged black majority. The energy that was summoned to protest apartheid and to boycott it never returned since the advent of democracy. This commentary explores the current state of human rights in South Africa, their prospects, and challenges to their respect, protection, and fulfillment.
`In' analytical NoteWorld Affairs US Vol.186, No.4; Winter 2023: p.1019-1025
Journal SourceWorld Affairs US Vol: 186 No 4
Key WordsHuman Rights ;  Democracy ;  Racism ;  South Africa ;  Apartheid ;  Accountability ;  Rwandan Genocide ;  Race and Ethnicity


 
 
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