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Elite Conflicts Over Policing in South Africa: 1980-1990

NCJ Number
131910
Journal
Policing and Society Volume: 1 Issue: 4 Dated: (1991) Pages: 257-268
Author(s)
R Weitzer
Date Published
1991
Length
12 pages
Annotation
Data were drawn from parliamentary debates, newspaper reports, and in-depth interviews with party representatives to examine key cleavages over policing policy and operations among white South African political elites.
Abstract
The paper describes the central features of the policing doctrines of political parties, assesses the impact of pressures from liberal and conservative parties, and reviews changes and continuities under the new de Klerk Government. During the 1980s, the conflict grew particularly intense as a result of the escalation of popular unrest and police repression and government departures from traditional apartheid policies. Parties to the left and right issued diametrically opposed criticisms of policing. Since the inauguration in September 1989 of Frederik de Klerk, a reformist president, some official pronouncements suggest at least an implicit rejection of the status quo. Recently, the Minister of Law and Order acknowledged the need to promote greater contact between police and blacks and to increase black representation in the force. 50 notes and 20 references (Author abstract modified)