SOUTH-AFRICA AND THE LIMITS OF CIVIL-SOCIETY

Authors
Citation
D. Glaser, SOUTH-AFRICA AND THE LIMITS OF CIVIL-SOCIETY, Journal of southern african studies, 23(1), 1997, pp. 5-25
Citations number
60
Categorie Soggetti
Area Studies
ISSN journal
03057070
Volume
23
Issue
1
Year of publication
1997
Pages
5 - 25
Database
ISI
SICI code
0305-7070(1997)23:1<5:SATLOC>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
This paper provides a critical commentary on the civil society debate conducted in sections of the South African liberation movement, especi ally amongst those associated with township civic associations, in the early 1990s. The first part of the paper establishes the historical c ontext of the civil society debate, sketching the evolution of the civ ics and the arrival of civil society 'talk' in the political camp broa dly aligned to the African National Congress (ANC). The larger part of the paper is an excursion into political theory. It welcomes recognit ion of the democratic value of an autonomous civil realm by a movement whose historical allegiances and practices are far from consistently democratic. Nevertheless, the paper calls into question some noteworth y formulations of the case for civil society made by intellectuals and activists linked to the civics, arguing that these are problematic fo r the projects both of creating a more socially egalitarian society an d of setting in place a post-apartheid democracy that is liberty-prote ctive and inclusive. The paper offers elements of an alternative way o f conceptualising a normatively ideal civil society. It concludes with some brief reflections on the state of play regarding state and civil society in South Africa in the period since the 1994 free elections.