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Militarisation, the state of exception, and fascism in South African universities

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Date

Authors

Reinders, Michael Bongani

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

University of the Free State

Abstract

The militarisation of university campuses in South African has led to the promotion of the use of violence and force against students. During the national student protests in 2015-2017 university management and the South African Police Service (SAPS) used militarisation and force which perpetuated violence on campuses. By understanding the state of exception as the suspension of the rule of law it is evident that it can be used as a fascist way to react to those questioning the status quo. Many South African universities, particularly the University of Pretoria (UP), employed this as a tool to deal with student protests. This shows that South African universities have fascist tendencies when dealing with student protests.

Description

Keywords

Fees must fall, State of exception, Militarisation, University campus, Fascism, Violence

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Reinders, M.B. 2019, 'Militarisation, the state of exception, and fascism in South African universities', Acta Academica, vol. 51, no. 1, pp. 72-87.