Racial Prejudice and Economic Pragmatism: a South African Case-Study
In: The journal of modern African studies: a quarterly survey of politics, economics & related topics in contemporary Africa, Band 14, Heft 3, S. 487-506
Abstract
Race relations have become one of the most sensitive of international issues. They have been transformed from the domestic concern of single countries to a matter of world concern. The story of this transformation is almost too well-known for comment. It grew from a massive revulsion against fascist racialism, the decline of white dominance, the emergence of new states from colonial empires, and the growing dependence of developed countries on the raw materials of the less developed. The United Nations Organisation has, in addition, given the non-white majority a forum from which they can condemn countries maintaining racial stratification. It is clear, therefore, that a breakdown in racial prejudice would not only ease some world tensions, but is a desirable end in itself.
Problem melden