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  1. White Namibians in tourism and the politics of belonging through Bushmen

    White Namibians in tourism and the politics of belonging through Bushmen

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Anthropology Southern Africa • Authors: Stasja P. Koot --- International Institute of Social Studies, Erasmus University, The Netherlands
    Namibian Bushmen, such as the Hai//om and the Ju/’hoansi, are increasingly involved in the growing, white-dominated tourism industry. In this, white Namibians tend to position Bushmen and themselves as people of nature and conservationists. Elsewhere, whites from southern Africa have...
  2. Silencing the past: historical and archaeological colonisation of the Southern San in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

    Silencing the past: historical and archaeological colonisation of the Southern San in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Anthropology Southern Africa • Authors: Michael Francis --- Athabasca University, I University Drive, Canada
    The San of the Drakensberg are assumed to be extinct. Yet, there are Zulu-speaking people in the Drakensberg who still identify as San. These people and their claims both challenge the preconceived notions of what it means to be San...
  3. An ‘historic victory’ for the Basarwa in Botswana?: Reading the evidence

    An ‘historic victory’ for the Basarwa in Botswana?: Reading the evidence

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Anthropology Southern Africa • Authors: Emile Boonzaier --- Department of Anthropology and Sociology,
    In late 2006 ‘the Basarwa’ won a landmark case against the Botswana government, returning their rights to continue living in the Central Kalahari Game Reserve (from which they had been ‘forcibly’ removed). The case attracted massive media attention, both in...
  4. “Taming” Bushman farm labour: a villeinous era in neo-feudal Namibia?

    “Taming” Bushman farm labour: a villeinous era in neo-feudal Namibia?

    Item type: Journal Article • Journal: Anthropology Southern Africa • Authors: Robert Gordon --- Anthropology Department, South Africa
    This paper examines how “wild” Bushmen became “tame” farm labour in Namibia during a situation where policy encouraged massive white farm settlement while undergoing significant administrative personnel downscaling. Downscaling led to an increase in unrecorded informal violence because farmers were...