REVOLUTION
Thumbnail | Title | Description |
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The African Communist Number 17 April - June 1964 | ||
The African Communist Number 15 October-December 1963 | ||
The African Communist Number 15 October-December 1963 | ||
The African Communist Number 10 July/August 1962 | ||
The African Communist Number 1 October 1959 | ||
The advent of revolution |
The great social convulsions of this decade, the post-Sharpeville period, reached their peak on the banks of Bashee River and in the slums of Paarl. |
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Terrorism | ||
Statement of a joint meeting of the National Executive Council and the RC of the ANC (SA) held in Luanda on 27th December 1978 to 1st January 1979 |
Statement of the African National Congress National Executive Committee on a visit to Vietnam to discuss the revolutionary experience of the Vietnam people and to draw on their experience for the South African struggle. |
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State of organisation and the way forward |
Paper by John Motshabi on the state of the African National Congress and the way forward. Covers military strategy, enemy infiltration, programme of action, democratic participation, negotiations and seizure of power, building a revolutionary army, cadre policy. |
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South Africa: Is the Revolution Over? |
Ten years ago, socialists around the world were active in the struggle apartheid in South Africa, and looked to it as a beacon of hope. |
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South Africa's racist state and the national democratic revolution |
Paper by Jack Simons on apartheid and the democratic revolution. Examines the history of political systems in South Africa, looks at the Constitution, racial segregation, white supremacy, exclusions of Africans and the racist government. |
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Revolutions are not abnormal | ||
Revolutionary struggle in South Africa |
Announcement of a public meeting to take place in London, about the revolutionary struggle in South Africa. |
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Revolutionary song | ||
Revolutionary African students reject detente | ||
Revolution: further reflections | ||
Revolution is now | ||
Revolution in South Africa | ||
Pretoriastroika: who benefits? | ||
Postcolonialism in the wake of the Nairobi revolution: Ngugi wa Thiong'o and the idea of Africa |