Case pending: practices of inclusion and exclusion in a class of plaintiffs

Original Articles

Case pending: practices of inclusion and exclusion in a class of plaintiffs

Published in: Anthropology Southern Africa
Volume 38 , issue 1-2 , 2015 , pages: 16–28
DOI: 10.1080/23323256.2015.1016053
Author(s): Rita Kesselring Institute of Social Anthropology, University of Basel, Switzerland

Abstract

Apartheid victims have had a difficult standing in South Africa in the years that followed the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). In the government's perspective, the TRC had conclusively dealt with apartheid victimhood. Consequently, when victims turned to US courts in the early 2000s to sue multinational companies for their role in the perpetration of apartheid- era crimes, they faced everything from scepticism to hostility. From a different perspective, many scholars shared this scepticism, fearing the individualising power of the law. But contrary to the TRC, these apartheid litigations, as class actions, offer individual victims the chance to make their claims collectively.

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