
Zuma’s illiberal agenda disguised as an “anti-imperialist” project
Zuma is strategically framing this illiberal agenda as an attempt to revive indigenous governance structures.

Zuma is strategically framing this illiberal agenda as an attempt to revive indigenous governance structures.

Since I am a Zimbabwean alert to the nightmare of bad laws, I had to share my experience with fellow Africans.

Critics frequently argue that concerns over expropriation are based on irrational fear, but this film makes it impossible to sustain this view.

Will the crucial policymakers take heed of this clear and irrefutable evidence and abrogate this legislation?

The genesis of the country’s current tension with the USA can and must be traced back to this.

Nobody should be so bold as to propose that the Constitution itself expects that the courts will always be right.

The laying of criminal complaints is not a legitimate area of democratic contestation, nor is it a manifestation of political expression.

The ANC, unlike the radical EFF, just believes in a more gradual shift towards socialism.

Constitutional reasonableness requires the existence of a legitimate government purpose, which in this context evidently does not exist.

Why are Europeans seen as the only colonisers in South Africa when the Zulus engaged in violent imperialism as well?