“We’ll fight this little struggle”: alleviating hunger in South Africa

SUMMARY In post-apartheid South Africa, citizens have on several instances resorted to the use of social protest or public dissent as a means of improving their access to essential socioeconomic amenities. The protection of citizens from chronic hunger has been a dominant theme among policy actors...

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Main Author: Bright Nkrumah
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: Pretoria University Law Press 2020-08-01
Series:De Jure
Online Access:http://www.dejure.up.ac.za/index.php/volumes/2020/volume-53-2020/nkrumah
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spelling doaj-42b36890f30848349da6a640db7a05132020-11-25T03:12:01ZafrPretoria University Law PressDe Jure 1466-35972225-71602020-08-0153“We’ll fight this little struggle”: alleviating hunger in South AfricaBright NkrumahSUMMARY In post-apartheid South Africa, citizens have on several instances resorted to the use of social protest or public dissent as a means of improving their access to essential socioeconomic amenities. The protection of citizens from chronic hunger has been a dominant theme among policy actors in South Africa, most of whom have expansive mandates to ensure citizens have adequate access to food. However, the number of people facing hunger remains high, giving rise to questions about the best approach to address chronic hunger, specifically, through social protest. Social protest, as used here, consists of struggles or resistance against government actions or inactions. Ironically, whiles social protest has been used on different fronts (housing, health, education and wrongful eviction), chronic hunger or lack of people’s access to adequate food hardly becomes a pivot around which protesters seek to bring about reform. Based on examples from selected countries, the discussion notes that protest is an effective tool for protecting citizens from food poverty. However, before protest could influence food policy, there is the need for mobilisation of all relevant actors to challenge existing (inadequate) food policies. The paper identified various factors that have contributed to and acted as a hindrance against food protest in various jurisdictions and examined how these factors have prevented widespread food protest in South Africa.http://www.dejure.up.ac.za/index.php/volumes/2020/volume-53-2020/nkrumah
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bright Nkrumah
spellingShingle Bright Nkrumah
“We’ll fight this little struggle”: alleviating hunger in South Africa
De Jure
author_facet Bright Nkrumah
author_sort Bright Nkrumah
title “We’ll fight this little struggle”: alleviating hunger in South Africa
title_short “We’ll fight this little struggle”: alleviating hunger in South Africa
title_full “We’ll fight this little struggle”: alleviating hunger in South Africa
title_fullStr “We’ll fight this little struggle”: alleviating hunger in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed “We’ll fight this little struggle”: alleviating hunger in South Africa
title_sort “we’ll fight this little struggle”: alleviating hunger in south africa
publisher Pretoria University Law Press
series De Jure
issn 1466-3597
2225-7160
publishDate 2020-08-01
description SUMMARY In post-apartheid South Africa, citizens have on several instances resorted to the use of social protest or public dissent as a means of improving their access to essential socioeconomic amenities. The protection of citizens from chronic hunger has been a dominant theme among policy actors in South Africa, most of whom have expansive mandates to ensure citizens have adequate access to food. However, the number of people facing hunger remains high, giving rise to questions about the best approach to address chronic hunger, specifically, through social protest. Social protest, as used here, consists of struggles or resistance against government actions or inactions. Ironically, whiles social protest has been used on different fronts (housing, health, education and wrongful eviction), chronic hunger or lack of people’s access to adequate food hardly becomes a pivot around which protesters seek to bring about reform. Based on examples from selected countries, the discussion notes that protest is an effective tool for protecting citizens from food poverty. However, before protest could influence food policy, there is the need for mobilisation of all relevant actors to challenge existing (inadequate) food policies. The paper identified various factors that have contributed to and acted as a hindrance against food protest in various jurisdictions and examined how these factors have prevented widespread food protest in South Africa.
url http://www.dejure.up.ac.za/index.php/volumes/2020/volume-53-2020/nkrumah
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