Hardcover
1989 · Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire
by Dubow, Saul
Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan in association with St. Antony's College, Oxford, 1989. Hardcover. VG/VG (ex-library with labels and stamps on dj spine, block, inside front and rear covers and title page verso. Pages are otherwise clean and clear.). Black cloth boards with gilt lettering; color illustrated dust jacket with black lettering; xi, 250 pp. Contents: Introduction -- Part I: -- 1 The elaboration of segregationist ideology, c. 1900-36 -- 1. Early exponents of segregation -- 2. 'Cultural adaptation' -- 3. Segregation after the first world war -- 4. The liberal break with segregation -- 2. Segregation and cheap labour -- 1. The cheap-labour thesis -- 2. The mines -- 3. White labour -- 4. Agriculture -- 5. The reserves -- 6. An emergent proletariat -- Part II: -- 3 Structure and conflict in the native affairs department -- 1. The Native Affairs Department (NAD) -- 2. Restructuring the NAD: the Public Service Commission, 1922-3 -- 3. Conflict within the State and the Native Administration Bill -- 4. 'Efficiency', 'economy' and 'flexibility' -- 4. The ideology of native administration -- 1. The Transkeian Administration -- 2. The administrative ethic in other provinces -- 3. The 1920 Native Affairs Act and its demise -- 4. 'Retribalisation' and customary law -- 5. The legacy of 'protection' -- 6 . Conclusion -- Part III: -- 5. The passage of Hertzog's native bills, part one -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Smuts and Hertzog, 1925-9 -- 3. The Joint Select Committee and Fusion, 1930-5 -- 6. The passage of Hertzog's native bills, part two -- 1. Reactions to the segregation bills, 1926-36 -- 2. The 1936 'compromise' and the enactment of the native bills -- 3. Conclusion -- Conclusion -- Notes and references. Originally presented as the author's thesis (doctoral--Oxford University, 1987).
(Inventory #: 184273)