The campaign gained prominence in the mid-1980s on university campuses in the US. The debate headlined the October 1985 issue (above) of Vassar College's student newspaper. [1] Disinvestment from South Africa, also termed divestment from South Africa, was first advocated in the 1960s, in protest of South Africa's system of Apartheid, but was not implemented on a significant scale until the mid 1980s. The disinvestment campaign, after being realized in federal legislation enacted in 1986 by the United States, is credited[2] as pressuring the South African Government to embark on negotiations ultimately leading to the dismantling of the apartheid system. Vassar College is a private, coeducational, highly selective liberal arts college situated in Poughkeepsie, New York. ...
A beach, in apartheid South Africa, 1982. ...
Year 1980 (MCMLXXX) was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link displays the 1980 Gregorian calendar). ...
Disinvestment was a term first used in the 1980s, most commonly in the United States, to refer to the use of a concerted economic boycott designed to pressure the government of South Africa into abolishing its policy of apartheid, which was still in force at that time. ...
The apartheid system in South Africa was ended through a series of negotiations between 1990 and 1993. ...
United Nations campaign (1962-1965)
International opposition to Apartheid in South Africa | | Organizations | | Anti-Apartheid Movement UN Special Committee against Apartheid Artists United Against Apartheid Halt All Racist Tours A beach, in apartheid South Africa, 1982. ...
A beach, in apartheid South Africa, 1982. ...
In response to an appeal by Albert Luthuli, the British Anti-Apartheid Movement (AAM) was founded in London on 26 June 1959 at a meeting of South African exiles and their supporters [1]. Julius Nyerere would summarize its purpose: [2]. Originally called the Boycott Movement, it would expand its focus...
Artists United Against Apartheid was a protest group founded by activist performer Steven van Zandt to protest the existence of apartheid in South Africa. ...
Halt All Racist Tours was a group set up in New Zealand in 1969 to protest rugby union tours to and from Apartheid South Africa. ...
| | Conferences | | 1964 Conference for Economic Sanctions 1978 World Conference against Racism The World Conference against Racism (WCAR) has been held three times: in 1978, 1983, and 2001. ...
| | Campaigns | | Disinvestment · Academic boycott | | Instruments and legislation | | UN Resolution 1761 (1962) Crime of Apartheid Convention (1973) Gleneagles Agreement (1977) Sullivan Principles (1977) Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act (1986) United Nations General Assembly Resolution 1761 was passed on 6 November 1962 in response to the racist policies of apartheid established by the South African Government. ...
The crime of apartheid is defined by the 2002 treaty establishing the International Criminal Court as inhumane acts of a character similar to other crimes against humanity committed in the context of an institutionalised regime of systematic oppression and domination by one racial group over any other racial group or...
The Gleneagles Agreement was unanimously approved by the Commonwealth of Nations at a meeting at Gleneagles, Auchterarder, Scotland. ...
The Sullivan Principles were developed in 1977 by the Rev. ...
This page is a candidate for speedy deletion. ...
| | Other aspects | | Elimination of Racism Day Biko (song) · Activists The International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination is observed annually on 21 March. ...
Biko is a protest song by British singer Peter Gabriel, about Steve Biko, a South African anti-apartheid campaigner who died in police custody in 1977. ...
| | This box: view • talk • edit | In November 1962, the United Nations General Assembly passed Resolution 1761, a non-binding resolution establishing the United Nations Special Committee against Apartheid and called for imposing economic and other sanctions on South Africa. All Western nations were unhappy with the call for sanctions and as a result boycotted the committee.[3] The United Nations General Assembly (GA) is one of the five principal organs of the United Nations. ...
United Nations General Assembly Resolution 1761 was passed on 6 November 1962 in response to the racist policies of apartheid established by the South African Government. ...
Following this passage of this resolution the UK-based Anti-Apartheid Movement spearheaded the arrangements for an international conference on sanctions to be held in London in April 1964. According to Lisson, "The aim of the Conference was to work out the practicability of economic sanctions and their implications on the economies of South Africa, the UK, the US and the Protectorates. Knowing that the strongest opposition to the application of sanctions came from the West (and within the West, Britain), the Committee made every effort to attract as wide and varied a number of speakers and participants as possible so that the Conference findings would be regarded as objective."[3] In response to an appeal by Albert Luthuli, the British Anti-Apartheid Movement (AAM) was founded in London on 26 June 1959 at a meeting of South African exiles and their supporters [1]. Julius Nyerere would summarize its purpose: [2]. Originally called the Boycott Movement, it would expand its focus...
The conference was named the International Conference for Economic Sanctions Against South Africa. This conference, Lisson writes, "established the necessity, the legality and the practicability of internationally organised sanctions against South Africa, whose policies were seen to have become a direct threat to peace and security in Africa and the world. Its findings also pointed out that in order to be effective, a programme of sanctions would need the active participation of Britain and the US, who were also the main obstacle to the implementation of such a policy."[3] Attempts to persuade British policymakers The conference was not successful in persuading Britain to take up economic sanctions against South African though. Rather, the British government "remained firm in its view that the imposition of sanctions would be unconstitutional "because we do not accept that this situation in South Africa constitutes a threat to international peace and security and we do not in any case believe that sanctions would have the effect of persuading the South African Government to change its policies'."[3] The AAM tried to make sanctions an election issue in the 1964 General Election in Britain. Candidates were asked to state their position on economic sanctions and other punitive measures against the South African government. Most candidates who responded answered in the affirmative. After the Labour Party sweep to power though, commitment to the anti-apartheid cause dissipated. In short order, Labour Party leader Harold Wilson told the press that his Labour Party was "not in favour of trade sanctions partly because, even if fully effective, they would harm the people we are most concerned about - the Africans and those white South Africans who are having to maintain some standard of decency there."[3] Even so, Lisson writes that the "AAM still hoped that the new Labour Government would be more sensitive to the demands of public opinion than the previous Government." But by the end of 1964, it was clear that the election of the Labour Party had made little difference in the governments overall unwillingness to imposing sanctions.
Steadfast rejection by the West Lisson summarizes the dismal situation at the UN in 1964: "At the UN, Britain consistently refused to accept that the situation in South Africa fell under Chapter VII of the [United Nations] Charter. Instead, in collaboration with the US, it worked for a carefully worded appeal on the Rivonia and other political trials to try to appease Afro-Asian countries and public opinion at home and abroad; by early 1965 the issue of sanctions had lost momentum."[3] Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter sets out the UN Security Councils powers to maintain peace. ...
According to Lisson, Britain's rejection was premised on its economics interests in South Africa, which would be put at risk if any type of meaningful economic sanctions were put in place.
United States campaign (1977-1989) The Sullivan Principles (1977) -
Knight[4] writes that anti-Apartheid movement in the U.S found that Washington was unwilling to get involved in economically isolating South Africa. The movement responded by organized lobbying of individual businesses and institutional investors to end their involvement with or investments in the apartheid state as a matter of corporate social responsibility. This campaign was coordinated by several faith-based institutional investors eventually ledding to the creation of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility. An array of celebrities, including singer Paul Simon, also participated. The Sullivan Principles were developed in 1977 by the Rev. ...
Corporate social responsibility (CSR) is an expression used to describe what some see as a companyâs obligation to be sensitive to the needs of all of the stakeholders in its business operations. ...
Paul Frederic Simon (born October 13, 1941) is an American singer-songwriter and guitarist, half of the folk-singing duo Simon and Garfunkel who continues a successful solo career. ...
The key instrument of this campaign was the so-called Sullivan Principles, authored by and named after the Rev. Leon Sullivan. Leon Sullivan was an African-American preacher who, in 1977, was also a board member of the corporate giant General Motors. At that time, General Motors was the largest employer of blacks in South Africa. The principles required that the corporation ensure that all employees are treated equally and in an integrated environment, both in and outside the workplace, and regardless of race, as a condition of doing business. These principles directly conflicted with the mandated racial discrimination and segregation policies of apartheid-era South Africa, thus making it impossible for businesses adopting the Sullivan Principles to continue doing business there. The Sullivan Principles were developed in 1977 by the Rev. ...
Reverend Dr. Leon Howard Sullivan (October 16, 1922 - April 24, 2001) was a Baptist minister, a civil rights leader and social activist focusing on the creation of job training opportunities for African-Americans, a longtime General Motors Board Member, and an important part of the dismantling of Apartheid in South...
Languages Predominantly American English Religions Protestantism (chiefly Baptist and Methodist); Roman Catholicism; Islam Related ethnic groups Sub-Saharan Africans and other African groups, some with Native American groups. ...
General Motors Corporation, also known as GM or GMC is the worlds 2nd largest auto company by sales revenue (behind Toyota[1]) and was the worlds largest automaker by unit sales from 1931 to 2006, longer than any other automaker. ...
While the anti-Apartheid movement lobbied individual businesses to adopt and comply with the Sullivan Principles, the movement opened an additional front with the institutional investors. Besides advocating that institutional investors withdraw any direct investments in South African-based companies, anti-Apartheid activists also lobbied for the divestment from all U.S.-based companies having South African interests who had not yet themselves adopted the Sullivan Principles. The institutional investors such as public pension funds were the most unsuspectingly to these types of lobbying efforts. Public companies with South Africa interests were thus confronted on two levels: First, they were petitioned by concerned citizen shareholders who, admitted, posed more of a threat to the often-cherished corporate reputations than to the stock price. Second, the companies were presented with the significant financial threat where by one or more of their major institutional investors decides to withdraw their investments.
Achieving critical mass (1984-1989) Apartheid in South Africa | | Events and Projects | | Sharpeville Massacre · Rivonia Trial Church Street bombing · CODESA St James Church massacre A beach, in apartheid South Africa, 1982. ...
cropped from Image:Aprt-YStar. ...
The Sharpeville massacre, also known as the Sharpeville shootings, occurred on March 21, 1960, when South African police opened fire on a crowd of black protesters. ...
The Rivonia Trial was an infamous trial which took place in South Africa between 1963 and 1964, in which ten leaders of the African National Congress were tried for 221 acts of sabotage designed to ferment violent revolution. // Origins It was named after Rivonia, the suburb of Johannesburg where 19...
The Church Street bombing was a 1983 terrorist attack by the African National Congress in Pretoria, South Africa which killed 16 and wounded 130. ...
The apartheid system in South Africa was ended through a series of negotiations between 1990 and 1993. ...
The St James Church massacre was a massacre perpetrated at St James Church, Cape Town by the Azanian Peoples Liberation Army (APLA). ...
| | Organisations | | ANC · AWB · Black Sash · CCB · HNP MK · National Party · SACP · UDF For political parties with similar names in other countries, see Northern Rhodesian African National Congress and Zambian African National Congress. ...
The flag of the Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging The Afrikaner Weerstandsbeweging or AWB, is a political and paramilitary group in South Africa under the leadership of Eugène TerreBlanche. ...
The Black Sash was a non-violent white womens resistance organisation founded in 1955 in South Africa by Jean Sinclair. ...
The Civil Cooperation Bureau (CCB) was a covert South African apartheid-era hit squad[1]. Inaugurated in 1986, and fully functional by 1988 it was set up to eliminate anti-apartheid activists, destroy ANC facilities, and find means to circumvent the economic sanctions[1] imposed on that country. ...
The Herstigte Nasionale Party van Suid-Afrika (Refounded National Party of South Africa) was formed as a right wing splinter group of the South African National Party. ...
For other uses of Umkhonto, see Umkhonto (disambiguation) Umkhonto we Sizwe (or MK), translated Spear of the Nation, was the military wing of the African National Congress (ANC). ...
The National Party (Afrikaans: Nasionale Party) (with its members sometimes known as Nationalists or Nats) was the governing party of South Africa from June 4th 1948 until May 9th 1994, and was disbanded in 2005. ...
SACP symbol South African Communist Party (SACP) is a political party in South Africa. ...
The United Democratic Front (UDF) was one of the most important anti-apartheid organisations of the 1980s. ...
| | People | | PW Botha · Oupa Gqozo · DF Malan Nelson Mandela · Walter Sisulu Helen Suzman · Andries Treurnicht HF Verwoerd · Oliver Tambo · BJ Vorster P.W. Botha Pieter Willem Botha, (born January 12, 1916) commonly known as P.W. and as die groot krokodil (the great crocodile) was Prime Minister of South Africa from 1978 to 1984 and State President of South Africa from 1984 to 1989. ...
Joshua Oupa Gqozo (10 March 1952 - ) was a former Ciskei military ruler. ...
Daniel François Malan (May 22, 1874 - February 7, 1959) is seen as the champion of South African nationalism. ...
Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela (IPA pronunciation: //) (born July 18, 1918) was the first President of South Africa to be elected in fully-representative democratic elections. ...
Walter Max Ulyate Sisulu Walter Max Ulyate Sisulu (May 18, 1912 â May 5, 2003) was a South African anti-apartheid activist and member of the African National Congress (ANC). ...
Helen Suzman was born Helen Gavronsky on 7th November 1917 in Germiston, South Africa as the daughter of Lithuanian-Jewish immigrants. ...
Andries Treurnicht (1921-1993) was the founder and the leader of the Conservative Party in South Africa. ...
Hendrik Frensch Verwoerd Hendrik Frensch Verwoerd (8 September 1901 - 6 September 1966) was Prime Minister of South Africa from 1958 to 1966, when he was assassinated. ...
Oliver Reginald Tambo (27 October 1917 - 24 April 1993) was a South African anti-apartheid politician and a central figure in the African National Congress (ANC). ...
B. J. Vorster Balthazar Johannes Vorster (December 13, 1915 - September 10, 1983), better known as John Vorster, was Prime Minister of South Africa from 1966 to 1978, and President from 1978 to 1979. ...
| | Places | | Bantustan · District Six · Robben Island Sophiatown · South-West Africa Soweto · Vlakplaas Map of the black homelands in South Africa as of 1986 Map of the black homelands in Namibia as of 1978 Bantustan is a territory designated as a tribal homeland for black South Africans and Namibians during the apartheid era. ...
District Six is the name of a former neighborhood of Cape Town, South Africa, best known for the forced removal of its inhabitants during the 1970s. ...
Prison buildings on Robben Island. ...
Sophiatown was a lively, mostly-black suburb of Johannesburg, South Africa. ...
South-West Africa is the former name (1884-1990) of Namibia under German (as German South-West Africa, Deutsch Süd-West Afrika) and (from 1915) South African administration when it was conquered from the Germans during World War I. Following the war, the Treaty of Versailles declared the territory...
Johannesburg, including Soweto, from the International Space Station Soweto is an urban area in the City of Johannesburg, in Gauteng, South Africa. ...
Vlakplaas is a farm that served as the headquarters of a counterinsurgency unit working for the apartheid government in South Africa. ...
| | Other aspects | | Apartheid laws · Freedom Charter Sullivan Principles · Kairos Document Disinvestment campaign The Apartheid Legislation in South Africa was a series of different laws and acts which were to help the apartheid-government to enforce the segregation of different races and cement the power and the dominance by the Whites, of substantially European descent, over the other race groups. ...
The Freedom Charter was adopted at the Congress of the People in Kliptown, South Africa on 26 June 1955 by the African National Congress and its allies. ...
The Sullivan Principles were developed in 1977 by the Rev. ...
The Kairos Document (KD) is a provocative theological statement issued by an anonymous group of theologians mostly based in the black townships of Soweto, South Africa, in 1985. ...
| | This box: view • talk • edit | The disinvestment campaign in the United States, which had been in existence for quite some years, gained critical mass following the Black political resistance to the 1983 South African constitution which included a "complex set of segregated parliaments." Richard Knight writes: "In a total rejection of apartheid, black South Africans mobilized to make the townships ungovernable, black local officials resigned in droves, and the government declared a State of Emergency in 1985 and used thousands of troops to quell "unrest." Television audiences throughout the world were to watch almost nightly reports of massive resistance to apartheid, the growth of a democratic movement, and the savage police and military response."[4] The result of the widely televised South African response was "a dramatic expansion of international actions to isolate apartheid, actions that combined with the internal situation to force dramatic changes in South Africa's international economic relations."[4]
University campuses The anti-Apartheid disinvestment campaign on campuses, which has existed for quite some time without gaining any significant traction, surged into action in 1984 on the wave of public interest created by the wide television coverage of the then recent resistance efforts of the black South Africans. Students organized to demand that their universities "divest", meaning that the universities were to cease investing in companies that traded or had operations in South Africa. At many universities, many students and faculty protested in order to force action on the issue. For example, in April, 1986, 61 students were arrested after building a shantytown in front of the chancellor's office at UC Berkeley. [5] The University of California, Berkeley (also known as Cal, UC Berkeley, UCB, or simply Berkeley) is a prestigious, public, coeducational university situated in the foothills of Berkeley, California to the east of San Francisco Bay, overlooking the Golden Gate and its bridge. ...
As a result of these organized "divestment campaigns", the boards of trustees of several prominent universities voted to divest completely from South Africa and companies with major South African interests. The first of these was Hampshire College. Hampshire College is an experimenting private liberal arts college in Amherst, Massachusetts. ...
Harvard University only undertook a partial "divestment" from South Africa and only after significant resistance.[6] Adam Soften and Aln Wirzbicki give this description: Harvard University (incorporated as The President and Fellows of Harvard College) is a private university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA and a member of the Ivy League. ...
"Throughout the ‘80s, Harvard professors for the most part avoided involvement with South Africa in protest of apartheid, and then president Derek C. Bok was a vocal supporter of work by the U.S. to prompt reform in South Africa. But the University was slow to pull its own investments out of companies doing business in South Africa, insisting that through its proxy votes, it could more effectively fight apartheid than by purging stocks from its portfolio. But after a decade of protests, Harvard did adopt a policy of selective divestment, and by the end of the ‘80s was almost completely out of South Africa."[6] University of California, in contrast to the limited action undertaken by Harvard, authorized the withdrawal of three billion dollars worth of investments from the apartheid state. Nelson Mandela has stated his belief that the University of California's massive divestment was particularly significant in abolishing white-minority rule in South Africa. Berkeley Davis Irvine Los Angeles Merced San Diego Santa Barbara Santa Cruz UC Office of the President in Oakland The University of California (UC) is a public university system in the state of California. ...
Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela (IPA pronunciation: //) (born July 18, 1918) was the first President of South Africa to be elected in fully-representative democratic elections. ...
Overall, according to Knight's analysis[4], the numbers year over year for educational institutions fully or partially divesting from South Africa were: | 1985 | 1987 | 1988 | | Number of institutes divesting | 53 | 128 | 155 | States and cities In addition to campuses, anti-apartheid activists found concerned and sympathetic legislators in cities and states. Several states and localities did pass legislation ordering the sale of such securities, most notably the city of San Francisco. The result was that "by the end of 1989 26 states, 22 counties and over 90 cities had taken some form of binding economic action against companies doing business in South Africa."[4] Many public pension funds connected to these local governments were legislated to disinvestment from South African companies. These local governments also exerted pressure via enacting selective purchasing policies, "whereby cities give preference in bidding on contracts for goods and services to those companies who do not do business in South Africa."[4] This page is a candidate for speedy deletion. ...
Federal involvement The activity at the state and city level set the stage for action at the federal level.
Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act -
Main article: Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act This began when the Senate and Congress presented Ronald Reagan with the Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid Act of 1986. Ronald Reagan responded by using his veto, but surprisingly and in testament to the strengthen of the anti-Apartheid movement, the Republican controlled senate overrode his veto. Knight gives this description the act: This page is a candidate for speedy deletion. ...
"The Act banned new U.S. investment in South Africa, sales to the police and military, and new bank loans, except for the purpose of trade. Specific measures against trade included the prohibition of the import of agricultural goods, textiles, shellfish, steel, iron, uranium and the products of state-owned corporations."[4] The results of the act were mixed in economic terms according to Knight[4]: Between 1985 and 1987, U.S. imports from South Africa declined 35%, although the trend reverses in 1998 when imports increased by 15%. Between 1985 and 1998, U.S. exports to South Africa increased by 40%. Knight attributes some of the increase in imports in 1988 to lax enforcement of the 1986 Act citing a 1989 study by the General Accounting Office. Knight writes that a "major weakness of the Act is that it does little to prohibit exports to South Africa, even in such areas as computers and other capital goods."[4] The Government Accountability Office (GAO) is the audit, evaluation, and investigative agency of the United States Congress. ...
Budget Reconciliation Act A second federal measure introduced by Representative Charles Rangel in 1987 as an amendment to the Budget Reconciliation Act halted the ability of U.S. corporations from attaining tax reimbursements for taxes paid in South Africa. The result was that U.S. corporations operating in South Africa were subject to double taxation. According to Knight: Charles Bernard Rangel Charles Bernard Rangel (born June 11, American politician. ...
"The sums of money involved are large. According to the Internal Revenue Service, taxes involved in 1982 were $211,593,000 on taxable income of $440,780,000. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce in South Africa has estimated that the measure increases the tax bill for U.S. companies from 57.5% to 72% of profits in South Africa."[4] Further legislative efforts An additionally and much harsher sanctions bill was passed by the House of Representatives (Congress) in August 1988. This bill mandated "the withdrawal of all U.S. companies from South Africa, the sale by U.S. residents of all investments in South African companies and an end to most trade, except for the import of certain strategic minerals."[4] In the end, the bill didn't become law as wasn't able to pass the Senate. (In the United States legislative system a bill must be passed by both the Senate and the House of Representatives before it can be signed into law by the President.) Even so, the fact that such a harsh bill made any progress at all though the legislature "alerted both the South African government and U.S. business that significant further sanctions were likely to be forthcoming" if the political situation in South Africa remained unchanged.
Effects on South Africa Economic effects Because of South Africa's heavy reliance on investments and trade from the West, it was particularly vulnerable to the campaign. The result was a flight of capital which plunged the economy into a prolonged period of high inflation (12 to 14% a year.) [4] While post-colonial African countries had already imposed sanctions on South Africa in solidarity with the Defiance Campaign, these measures had little effect because of the relatively small economies of those involved. The disinvestment campaign only impacted South Africa after the major Western nations, including the United States, got involved beginning in mid-1984. From 1984 onwards, according to Knight[4], because of the disinvestment campaign and the repayment of foreign loans, South Africa experienced considerable capital flight. The net capital movement out of South Africa was: Seen in Asian markets in the 1990s capital flight is when assets and/or money rapidly flow out of a country. ...
The Defiance Campaign was presented by the African National Congress (ANC) at a conference held in Bloemfontein, South Africa in December 1951. ...
Seen in Asian markets in the 1990s capital flight is when assets and/or money rapidly flow out of a country. ...
- "R9.2 billion in 1985"
- "R6.1 billion in 1986"
- "R3.1 billion in 1987"
- "R5.5 billion in 1988."
The capital flight triggered a dramatic decline in the international exchange rate of the South African currency, the rand. The currency decline made imports more expensive which in turn caused inflation in South Africa to rise at a very steep 12-15% per year.[4] The South African government did attempt to restrict the damaging outflow of capital. Knight writes that "in September 1985 it imposed a system of exchange control and a debt repayments standstill. Under exchange control, South African residents are generally prohibited from removing capital from the country and foreign investors can only remove investments via the financial rand, which is traded at a 20% to 40% discount compared to the commercial rand. This means companies that disinvest get significantly fewer dollars for the capital they withdraw."[4]
Criticism Many conservatives opposed the disinvestment campaign, accusing its advocates of hypocrisy for not also proposing that the same sanctions be leveled on either the Soviet Union or the People's Republic of China. This article deals with conservatism as a political philosophy. ...
Ronald Reagan, who was the President of the United States during the time the disinvestment movement was at its peak, also opposed it, instead favoring a policy of "constructive engagement" with the Pretoria regime. Ronald Wilson Reagan (February 6, 1911 â June 5, 2004) was the 40th President of the United States (1981 â 1989) and the 33rd Governor of California (1967 â 1975). ...
The presidential seal was first used in 1880 by President Rutherford B. Hayes and last modified in 1959 by adding the 50th star for Hawaii. ...
Motto: Praestantia Praevaleat Pretoria (May Pretoria Be Pre-eminent In Excellence) Country South Africa Province Gauteng Established 1855 Area - City 1,644 km² (634. ...
See also Disinvestment was a term first used in the 1980s, most commonly in the United States, to refer to the use of a concerted economic boycott designed to pressure the government of South Africa into abolishing its policy of apartheid, which was still in force at that time. ...
In response to an appeal by Albert Luthuli, the British Anti-Apartheid Movement (AAM) was founded in London on 26 June 1959 at a meeting of South African exiles and their supporters [1]. Julius Nyerere would summarize its purpose: [2]. Originally called the Boycott Movement, it would expand its focus...
The Academic boycotts of South Africa were a series of boycotts of South African academic institutions and scholars initiated in the 1960s, at the request of the African National Congress, with the goal of using such international pressure to force the end South Africas system of apartheid. ...
References - ^ The Fergusson Years: Vassar, 1986-2006, Vassar College Libraries Archives & Special Collections. Poughkeepsie, NY. 2006.
- ^ "Did an academic boycott help to end apartheid?", George Fink, Nature, Volume 417, Issue 6890, pp. 690 (2002).
- ^ a b c d e f The Anti-Apartheid Movement, Britain and South Africa: Anti-Apartheid Protest vs Real Politik, Arianna Lisson, PhD Dissertation, September 15 2000
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Chapter: Sanctions, Disinvestment, and U.S. Corporations in South Africa. Richard Knight. Sanctioning Apartheid (Africa World Press), 1990
- ^ "AROUND THE NATION; 61 ARRESTED AT BERKLEY IN PROTEST OF APARTHEID", AP, 1986-04-02.
- ^ a b [http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/mandela/20_conflicted_relationship.html A CONFLICTED RELATIONSHIP: Harvard supported South Africa through investments, but partially divested under protest] in Harvard Honors Nelson Mandela. Adam A. Sofen and Alan E. Wirzbicki.
1986 (MCMLXXXVI) was a common year starting on Wednesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
April 2 is the 92nd day of the year (93rd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar, with 273 days remaining. ...
External links - Documenting the U.S. Solidarity Movement: With reflections on the sanctions and divestment campaigns
- U.S. Economic Involvement with Apartheid South Africa
- An Analysis of U.S. Disinvestment from South Africa: Unity, Rights, and Justice
- Black South African Opinion on Disinvestment
- The Crusade Against South Africa
|