The "right to have rights": citizenship, legal identity and political community in Johannesburg

Abstract  The objective of this study is to identify the factors that enable “the right to have rights” in the South African political community, as well as to understand the way that community members perceive the meaning and value of these factors, during and following the 2008 xenophobic...

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Main Author: Holaday, Marion
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10539/8303
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-83032019-05-11T03:41:32Z The "right to have rights": citizenship, legal identity and political community in Johannesburg Holaday, Marion Abstract  The objective of this study is to identify the factors that enable “the right to have rights” in the South African political community, as well as to understand the way that community members perceive the meaning and value of these factors, during and following the 2008 xenophobic attacks. In order to understand political community, I draw heavily on Hannah Arendt and Michael Walzer, theorists who emphasise the importance of shared values, the right to self-determination and the influence of relationships with outsiders and outside forces on the changeable nature of the political community. By focusing on shared values rather than quantitative demographics and statistics, this study recognises that the South African political community that either contributed to xenophobic rhetoric or engaged in the 2008 xenophobic violence is neither confined to nor limited by indicators like neighborhood, social class or ethnicity. In order to identify the shared values of the South African political community and understand their meaning and value, I rely primarily on transcripts from interviews with citizens and migrants conducted by FMSP researchers three months after the 2008 attacks, research reports published in the year after the attacks and semi-structured interviews that I conducted with citizens and migrants from September through November 2009. 2010-07-26T10:34:25Z 2010-07-26T10:34:25Z 2010-07-26T10:34:25Z Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10539/8303 en application/pdf
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language en
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description Abstract  The objective of this study is to identify the factors that enable “the right to have rights” in the South African political community, as well as to understand the way that community members perceive the meaning and value of these factors, during and following the 2008 xenophobic attacks. In order to understand political community, I draw heavily on Hannah Arendt and Michael Walzer, theorists who emphasise the importance of shared values, the right to self-determination and the influence of relationships with outsiders and outside forces on the changeable nature of the political community. By focusing on shared values rather than quantitative demographics and statistics, this study recognises that the South African political community that either contributed to xenophobic rhetoric or engaged in the 2008 xenophobic violence is neither confined to nor limited by indicators like neighborhood, social class or ethnicity. In order to identify the shared values of the South African political community and understand their meaning and value, I rely primarily on transcripts from interviews with citizens and migrants conducted by FMSP researchers three months after the 2008 attacks, research reports published in the year after the attacks and semi-structured interviews that I conducted with citizens and migrants from September through November 2009.
author Holaday, Marion
spellingShingle Holaday, Marion
The "right to have rights": citizenship, legal identity and political community in Johannesburg
author_facet Holaday, Marion
author_sort Holaday, Marion
title The "right to have rights": citizenship, legal identity and political community in Johannesburg
title_short The "right to have rights": citizenship, legal identity and political community in Johannesburg
title_full The "right to have rights": citizenship, legal identity and political community in Johannesburg
title_fullStr The "right to have rights": citizenship, legal identity and political community in Johannesburg
title_full_unstemmed The "right to have rights": citizenship, legal identity and political community in Johannesburg
title_sort "right to have rights": citizenship, legal identity and political community in johannesburg
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10539/8303
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