SOUTH AFRICAN WOMEN ORGANIZING
In: Southern Africa report, Volume 1, Issue 4, p. 2-10
ISSN: 0820-5582
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In: Southern Africa report, Volume 1, Issue 4, p. 2-10
ISSN: 0820-5582
In: The African communist, Issue 178, p. 44-46
ISSN: 0001-9976
In: Social dynamics: SD ; a journal of the Centre for African Studies, University of Cape Town, Volume 30, Issue 1, p. 95-104
ISSN: 1940-7874
In: The African communist, Issue 164, p. 13-36
ISSN: 0001-9976
In: Agenda, Issue 16, p. 111
In: Political science research and methods: PSRM, Volume 10, Issue 3, p. 545-566
ISSN: 2049-8489
AbstractIf political circumstances are an important cause of unemployment in the Middle East, does this tend to attenuate the influence of economic infrastructure? I approach this question by building a geospatial dataset of the West Bank, an area with high unemployment arguably linked to political problems. I find Israeli army road obstacles, deployed during the Second Intifada, obstructed peri-urban Palestinian commuters from accessing commercial centers and border crossings, inflicting employment losses that were substantially offset by employment gains among their more centrally located Palestinian competitors. The findings suggest that marginal economic interventions, such as removing obstacles or paving roads, have a good chance of altering the spatial distribution of unemployment, but may struggle to reduce overall unemployment levels absent political reform.
In: The Parliamentarian: journal of the parliaments of the Commonwealth, Volume 95, Issue 2, p. 82-85
ISSN: 0031-2282
In: Military technology: Miltech, Volume 34, Issue 9, p. 18-24
ISSN: 0722-3226
World Affairs Online
In: India quarterly: a journal of international affairs, Volume 10, Issue 3, p. 206-214
ISSN: 0975-2684
An interview conducted circa 1990 with Walter Sisulu. Part of a series carried out at Grahamstown University and held at the UWC/Robben Island Mayibuye Archive.
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In: Issue: a journal of opinion, Volume 15, p. 18-29
When the 35-year-old Zwelakhe Sisulu arose to deliver the keynote address reproduced below, he stepped into a spotlight of national leadership toward which he had been moving for a decade. From an important role in the Black Consciousness Movement, he had become a leading strategic thinker for the United Democratic Front, South Africa's most widely representative, nonracial coalition. Described by a colleague as "a charismatic, handsome figure with a resonant voice," a man of "sharp intellect" and "sharp wit," he is now recognized as one of the country's outstanding younger leaders, comparable to Steve Biko, who died at the hands of the security police in 1977.
In: AIB-Dritte-Welt-Zeitschrift, Issue 12, p. 30-32
ISSN: 0936-1405
Enthält außerdem: 'Aufruf für verstärkte Sanktionen', S. 31; Sisulu, Walter: Nur der Kampf führt zu Verhandlungen, S. 32
World Affairs Online