South Africa’s Shrinking Sovereignty: Economic Crises, Ecological Damage, Sub-Imperialism and Social Resistances

The development of contemporary South Africa political economy occurred within the context of a global capitalist order characterized by increasingly unequal political and economic relations between and within countries. Before liberation in 1994, many people across the world actively supported the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Trevor Ngwane, Patrick Bond
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University) 2020-12-01
Series:Vestnik RUDN International Relations
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.rudn.ru/international-relations/article/viewFile/23323/18035
id doaj-9a4b1e089de14dc6a7fc67d410041768
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9a4b1e089de14dc6a7fc67d4100417682020-11-25T02:06:50ZengPeoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)Vestnik RUDN International Relations2313-06602313-06792020-12-01201678310.22363/2313-0660-2020-20-1-67-8318710South Africa’s Shrinking Sovereignty: Economic Crises, Ecological Damage, Sub-Imperialism and Social ResistancesTrevor Ngwane0Patrick Bond1University of JohannesburgUniversity of the Western CapeThe development of contemporary South Africa political economy occurred within the context of a global capitalist order characterized by increasingly unequal political and economic relations between and within countries. Before liberation in 1994, many people across the world actively supported the struggle against apartheid, with South Africa’s neighbouring states paying the highest price. The ‘sovereignty’ of the apartheid state was challenged by three processes: first, economic, cultural and sporting sanctions called for by Nelson Mandela’s African National Congress and other liberation movements, which from the 1960s-80s were increasingly effective in forcing change; second, solidaristic foreign governments including Sweden’s and the USSR’s provided material support to overthrowing the Pretoria Regime; and third, military defeat in Angola and the liberation of neighbouring Mozambique (1975), Zimbabwe (1980) and Namibia (1990) signalled the inevitability of change. But that state nevertheless maintained sufficient strength - e.g. defaulting on foreign debt and imposing exchange controls in 1985 - to ensure a transition to democracy that was largely determined by local forces. Since 1994, the shrinkage of sovereignty means the foreign influences of global capitalism amplify local socio-economic contradictions in a manner destructive to the vast majority of citizens. This is evident when considering economic, ecological, geopolitical and societal considerations.http://journals.rudn.ru/international-relations/article/viewFile/23323/18035commonseconomyenvironmentneoliberalismprotestsouth africaafricadecolonisationsovereigntysub-imperialism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Trevor Ngwane
Patrick Bond
spellingShingle Trevor Ngwane
Patrick Bond
South Africa’s Shrinking Sovereignty: Economic Crises, Ecological Damage, Sub-Imperialism and Social Resistances
Vestnik RUDN International Relations
commons
economy
environment
neoliberalism
protest
south africa
africa
decolonisation
sovereignty
sub-imperialism
author_facet Trevor Ngwane
Patrick Bond
author_sort Trevor Ngwane
title South Africa’s Shrinking Sovereignty: Economic Crises, Ecological Damage, Sub-Imperialism and Social Resistances
title_short South Africa’s Shrinking Sovereignty: Economic Crises, Ecological Damage, Sub-Imperialism and Social Resistances
title_full South Africa’s Shrinking Sovereignty: Economic Crises, Ecological Damage, Sub-Imperialism and Social Resistances
title_fullStr South Africa’s Shrinking Sovereignty: Economic Crises, Ecological Damage, Sub-Imperialism and Social Resistances
title_full_unstemmed South Africa’s Shrinking Sovereignty: Economic Crises, Ecological Damage, Sub-Imperialism and Social Resistances
title_sort south africa’s shrinking sovereignty: economic crises, ecological damage, sub-imperialism and social resistances
publisher Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia (RUDN University)
series Vestnik RUDN International Relations
issn 2313-0660
2313-0679
publishDate 2020-12-01
description The development of contemporary South Africa political economy occurred within the context of a global capitalist order characterized by increasingly unequal political and economic relations between and within countries. Before liberation in 1994, many people across the world actively supported the struggle against apartheid, with South Africa’s neighbouring states paying the highest price. The ‘sovereignty’ of the apartheid state was challenged by three processes: first, economic, cultural and sporting sanctions called for by Nelson Mandela’s African National Congress and other liberation movements, which from the 1960s-80s were increasingly effective in forcing change; second, solidaristic foreign governments including Sweden’s and the USSR’s provided material support to overthrowing the Pretoria Regime; and third, military defeat in Angola and the liberation of neighbouring Mozambique (1975), Zimbabwe (1980) and Namibia (1990) signalled the inevitability of change. But that state nevertheless maintained sufficient strength - e.g. defaulting on foreign debt and imposing exchange controls in 1985 - to ensure a transition to democracy that was largely determined by local forces. Since 1994, the shrinkage of sovereignty means the foreign influences of global capitalism amplify local socio-economic contradictions in a manner destructive to the vast majority of citizens. This is evident when considering economic, ecological, geopolitical and societal considerations.
topic commons
economy
environment
neoliberalism
protest
south africa
africa
decolonisation
sovereignty
sub-imperialism
url http://journals.rudn.ru/international-relations/article/viewFile/23323/18035
work_keys_str_mv AT trevorngwane southafricasshrinkingsovereigntyeconomiccrisesecologicaldamagesubimperialismandsocialresistances
AT patrickbond southafricasshrinkingsovereigntyeconomiccrisesecologicaldamagesubimperialismandsocialresistances
_version_ 1724932525233537024