Louis Grundlingh
University of Johannesburg
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South African Historical Journal | 2001
Louis Grundlingh
This article investigates the politics of HIV/AIDS in South Africa focusing on debates within the government during the last stages of apartheid and the democratic transition. It is part of a bigger project on the social history of HIV/AIDS in the country. The focus is on three sets of issues: first, it examines the role of ideology and moral beliefs in shaping policy; second, it discusses the development of policy itself, which only got seriously underway at the end of 199 1 ; and finally, it relates what governments were trying to do to the context of South African conditions in the last stages of the apartheid era. Whilst social science disciplines have paid attention to the HIV/AIDS disease for the period under discussion and internationally much has been written on the social history of HIV/AIDS’ very little has yet appeared on the topic in South
Archive | 2015
Louis Grundlingh; Judith Byfield; Carolyn A. Brown; Timothy Parsons; Ahmad Sikainga
Introduction At the outbreak of the Second World War, South Africa joined the Allied forces; however, South Africa was ill-prepared for war. The Union Defence Force (UDF) had a small cohort of permanent staff of 260 officers and 4,600 men and was similarly ill-equipped with weapons. A drastic reorganization took place, with emphasis on recruitment. Race determined the focus of the initial recruitment drives: Recruitment of white male soldiers received immediate attention. White men who volunteered for service were deployed as frontline combatants serving in East Africa, North Africa, and eventually Italy. These men were involved in two important battles: The first was the defeat of the Allies at Tobruk, where a South African division had to surrender to the German Afrika Korps under General Erwin Rommel in June 1942, and at El Alamein, where the Afrika Korps was forced to retreat. As a result, the South African military command realized the urgency of expanding its forces, as had been the case in the First World War. The expediencies of the war forced the government into mental gymnastics: it temporarily waived aspects of its racial policy of segregation, opening its recruitment drive to include black men, Indian men, and men of color. The Native Military Corps (NMC), under the control and command of the newly established Directorate of Non-European Army Services (DNEAS), was created under the command of Colonel Ernest Thomas Stubbs as a military unit specifically for black recruits. About 500 of the recruited black soldiers eventually served in North Africa. The historiography on the participation of Africans in the Second World War has been quite extensive, with the latest book by David Killingray, Fighting for Britain: African Soldiers in the Second World War (2010), adding to the list. Academic works focusing specifically on recruitment of African soldiers during the Second World War are limited. The most important publications directly related to this chapter are those of Robert J. Gordon, Hamilton S. Simelane, and Ashley Jackson, all of them touching on aspects of recruitment.
Archive | 2014
Louis Grundlingh
Contree / [Raad vir Geesteswetenskaplike Navorsing, Instituut vir Geskiedenisnavorsing, Afdeling Streekgeskiedenis] | 1999
Louis Grundlingh
Transafrican Journal of History | 1992
Louis Grundlingh
South African Historical Journal | 1992
Louis Grundlingh
South African Historical Journal | 1980
Louis Grundlingh
Historia | 2017
Louis Grundlingh
Historia | 2014
Louis Grundlingh
New contree: a journal of historical and human sciences for Southern Africa | 2011
Louis Grundlingh