C. Lado, The state and civil society: Transition and prospects of labour geographies in an era of economic globalisation in Nigeria and South Africa, SING J TROP, 21(3), 2000, pp. 295-315
This paper seeks to provide a comparative analysis of the role of labour mo
vements in democratisation during two very different political transitions
in Nigeria and South Africa and in the context of globalisation and neolibe
ral hegemony. First, Nigeria is examined as an example of authoritarian rol
lback and containment of pro-democracy movements in an economy heavily cond
itioned by interventions from the International Monetary Fund and the World
Bank. Second, South Africa is discussed as a case of home-grown structural
adjustment or gradual neoliberal shift in macroeconomic policies without r
elevant external interventions. The paper compares the failure of past Nige
rian democratisation with the problems and issues arising after the first s
uccessful democratic electoral change in South Africa. Labour is analysed b
y focusing on its relationships with a set of organisations, institutions a
nd regulated behaviours, and the broader concept of labour movement in its
plurality of forms of identity, militancy and organisation. The argument of
this paper is that the neoliberal discourse, with or without overt politic
al authoritarianism, involves a narrowing of spaces for institutionalising
the progressive role of labour in civil society. In the Nigerian case, this
process leads to grassroots' demand for a significant radicalisation of tr
ade union strategies, while the possibilities and constraints for such an o
utcome in the South African case are explored in relation to the crisis of
corporatist solutions. The paper concludes that the impact of labour is the
single most important factor in the establishment of democracy through all
iance with other social forces. At the same time, this conclusion cautions
with the contradictory nature of pressures placed on organised labour.