Type | Conference Paper - the 38th AFSAAP Conference: 21st Century Tensions and Transformation in Africa, Deakin University |
Title | The significance of the freedom charter in the ideological debates within the ruling anc alliance in South Africa. |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
URL | http://afsaap.org.au/assets/Mochekoe_Stephen_Rametse_AFSAAP2015.pdf |
Abstract | A germane question in contemporary South Africa is why the ruling ANC alliance, a once united liberation movement, which dislodged the apartheid state to assume governmental control, fractured in the post-liberation phase. This paper discusses how the ANC alliance’s inherited “revolutionary” language, useful in mobilising the diverse “ideological interests” into a united liberation front to bring down the apartheid state, is most divisive in the post- 1994 liberation period. Thus, the 1955 Freedom Charter, the ANC-led alliance’s main program encapsulating historical black liberation ideals is explored. Its significance lies in President Jacob Zuma's designation of 2015 as the Year of the Freedom Charter. Yet the 60 year old Freedom Charter is a very controversial document. The paper argues that the inherent ambiguity in the language of the Freedom Charter renders it contestable, thus vulnerable to wide re-interpretation by competing “ideological groups” within the ANC alliance. As a program of liberation ideals, the Freedom Charter is evoked in the post-1994 era by those who advocate a de-racialised pro-capitalist black nationalist trajectory and socialists seeking a working class revolution. Utilising the theoretical perspective of the functions of ideology to unify and divide groups, the ANC alliance’s and government policy documents are researched. Further research on how this language continues to be used in current contentious policy debates in the South African political landscape is vital. |
» | South Africa - Quarterly Labour Force Survey 2013 |