Title | Date | Reference | Authors | Call # | ISSN | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Elite capture in South Africa's land redistribution: the convergence of policy bias, corrupt practices and class dynamics | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (1): 5-24 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Building Angola: a political economy of infrastructure contractors in post-war Angola | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (1): 25-47 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
ZANU(PF)’s survival strategies and the co-option of civil society, 2000–2018 | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (1): 49-66 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Hastings Kamuzu Banda of Malawi: post-presidency Experiences, 1994–1997 | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (1): 67-84 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
‘Put South Africans first’: making sense of an emerging South African xenophobic (online) community | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (1): 85-103 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Navigating insecurities in foreign territory: the experiences of young Zimbabweans irregular immigrants at a South African informal settlement | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (1): 105-19 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Borderlessness and the 20th century rise of Ndau people's subaltern economy in the Zimbabwe-Mozambique borderland | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (1): 121-36 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Politics from the pits: artisanal gold mining, politics and the limits of the hegemonic state domination in Zimbabwe | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (1): 137-53 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
‘Satanbic stop stealing our money’: Zambia mine workers’ struggles against finance | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (1): 155-68 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Donal Lowry, 1959–2022 | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (1): 169-70 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
‘He’s black; I’ll speak to him in Chilapalapa’: prickly proximity and the slow death of a colonial pidgin in Zambia | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (2): 301-22 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Writing David Livingstone back into South African history | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (2): 285-99 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
The enduring legacy of British-promulgated institutions on civil liberties and governance in post-independence Malawi: an analysis grounded in historical institutionalism | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (2): 225-46 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
David Livingston and heritage diplomacy in Malawi-Scotland relations | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (2): 265-84 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
‘If you belong to my generation and you never read James Hadley Chase, then you are not educated’: everyday reading of high school students in Soweto, 1968–1976 | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (2): 205-24 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
African agency in democratic promotion: the African Union and election observation in Malawi | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (2): 247-63 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Faku's tusks: colonialism, resistance and accommodation in early 20th-century South Africa | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (2): 185-204 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
The return of resource nationalism to southern Africa - introduction | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (3): 339-57 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Between rhetoric and reality: recurrent resource nationalism and the practice of resource governance in Tanzania | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (3): 359-75 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Piping away development: the material evolution of resource nationalism in Mtwara, Tanzania | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (3): 377-95 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Resource nationalism and political change: mine nationalisation and the 2021 Zambian election | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (3): 397-414 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Asymmetries of power and capacity: the Zambia revenue authority (ZRA) as an instrument of resource nationalism, 1944-2021 | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (3): 415-38 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Resource nationalism in Zambia 1964-2020 and the liquidation of Konkola copper mines | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (3): 439-54 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Resource nationalism and indigenous capital accumulation: interrogating the motivations behind the Zambia industrial mining corporation (ZIMCO) bond redemptions, 1965-1975 | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (3): 455-75 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Resource nationalism in Zimbabwe: alternative visions and policy realities | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (3): 477-99 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Policy as performance: indigenisation and resource nationalism in Zimbabwe in the 2000s | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (3): 501-24 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
'Strange things happens when the lights are low': the South African night in Drum, 1951-1960 | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (4): 529-51 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
African reactions to the First World War: the case of the Mtenga-Tenga in northern Rhodesia (Zambia) | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (4): 553-67 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Centring Simon Kooper: frontier politics, desert environments and African resistance | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (4): 569-88 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
How access and benefit sharing entrenches inequity: the case of rooibos | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (4): 589-610 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Diamonds in the rough: the ICU's activism on the Lichtenburg diamond diggings, 1927-1931 | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (4): 611-35 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Racing to win: competition and co-operation between the National Olypmic Committee and public authorities in the development of the Botswana sport system | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (4): 637-59 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
‘Rooted back home’: exploring linkages between small-scale land reform beneficiaries and their communal areas of origin in Zimbabwe | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (4): 661-76 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Decentralising fraud: new models of electoral manipulation during the 2019 general elections in Mozambique | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (4): 677-95 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
The reception of COVID-19 denialist propaganda in Tanzania | 2023 | Journal of southern African studies 49 (4): 697-716 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Too rich to care? Southern African (SADC) international students navigating transnationalism and class at South African universities | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (1): 5-21 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Informal-sector organisations, political subjectivity, and citizenship in Zimbabwe | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (1): 23-41 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Deserving and undeserving welfare states: cash transfers and hegemonic struggles in South Africa | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (1): 43-60 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Educated girls, clothes and Christianity: subverting Mabel Shaw’s sartorial agenda on the colonial Zambian copperbelt, 1925–1964 | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (1): 61-80 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
‘Ovizire · Somgu: from where do we speak?’: Artistic interventions in the Namibian colonial archive (2018–2020) | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (1): 81-102 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
‘The League will not ignore the cry of the Negro race for justice’: Marcus Garvey, the League of Nations and South-West Africa | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (1): 103-17 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
‘Stealing Dingane’s title’: the fatal significance of saguate gift-giving in Zulu King Dingane’s killing of Governor Ribeiro (1833) and Piet Retief (1838) | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (1): 119-38 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Allies of expedience: the retention of Black Rhodesian soldiers in the Zimbabwe national army | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (1): 139-57 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Bulawayo breaks ranks: bureaucratic battles over African housing and urban citizenship in late colonial Zimbabwe, 1949–1977 | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (1): 159-81 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
More than ‘somebody’s wife’: maternalism, welfare and identity among White farming women in Zimbabwe c.1970–2000 | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (1): 183-200 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Tobacco farming and agrarian change in contemporary Southern Africa – An introduction | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (2): 221-33 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Tobacco farming following land reform in Zimbabwe: a new dynamic of social differentiation and accumulation | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (2): 251-71 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Beyond the state? Organised settler tobacco interests and the consolidation of southern Rhodesia’s tobacco industry in the early post Second World War years | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (2): 235-49 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
Tobacco farming and the reconfiguration of cooperatives in Tanzania | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (2): 273-91 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 | |||
The evolution of Zimbabwe’s tobacco industry: from colonial Klondike to contract farming | 2022 | Journal of southern African studies 48 (2): 293-315 | H6/KY [JOURNAL-] | 1465-3893 |