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9780761953036 Academic Inspection Copy

South Africa

Designing New Political Institutions
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The Republic of South Africa (RSA) held its first fully democratic elections in April 1994. They were a highly visible signal that the RSA is really moving from the era of apartheid towards a democratic constitutional state. The process is an archetypal case of a negotiated transition of a regime, and as such it is of great interest to students of constitutional mechanisms. The contributors to this book, leading South African political scientists, discuss the process, the difficulties and the achievements in the transformation of the RSA's political and legal institutions. They address various aspects of constitutional design and their interactions with social forces. They examine the new constitution, the roles of president and executive, the electoral, party and parliamentary systems, and the Constitutional Court. They look at the public service, at questions of labour and corporatism, at the RSA's changing external relations and at the position of the armed forces. The new government's Reconstruction and Development Programme, of which so much is expected, is seen to be particularly vulnerable to the pull of opposing forces.
Jan-Erik Lane is Professor of Political Science at the University of Geneva.
Introduction - Jan-Erik Lane and Murray Faure The Salient Features of the Interim Constitution - Joh J van Tonder The New South African Constitution - Dirk Kotz[ac]e The President and the Executive - Robert Schrire The Constitutional Court - Kierin O'Malley The Electoral System - Murray Faure South Africa's Party System - Susan Botha South Africa's Changing External Relations - Marie Muller The New South Africa and the Armed Forces - Deon Fourie Administrative Justice in the Public Service - Dirk J Brynard A Public Administration Interpretation of Section 24 of the Constitution Relations between State, Capital and Labor in South Africa - Louwrens Pretorius Towards Corporatism? The Politics of Affirmative Action in the Old and the New South Africa - Pierre Hugo The Reconstruction and Development Programme - Robert Cameron South Africa's Constitutional Development - Andr[ac]e Louw The New Parliament - Hennie Kotz[ac]e Transforming the Westminster Heritage
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