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FROM DEFENCE TO DEVELOPMENT
Redirecting Military Resources in South Africa
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853.GIF FROM DEFENCE TO DEVELOPMENT
Redirecting Military Resources in South Africa

Edited by Jacklyn Cock and Penny Mckenzie

IDRC/David Philip 1998
ISBN Out of print
e-ISBN 1-55250-151-5
234 pp.

 Browse from this page Download e-book

"Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired, represents, in the final analysis, a theft from those that hunger and are not fed, are cold and are not clothed." 
— Dwight D. Eisenhower

Remember the global peace dividend — the budget surpluses that were supposed to result from the raising of the Iron Curtain and the end of the arms race? As war-torn societies in the Middle East, Latin America, and parts of Africa found peace and began building democratic societies, governments were supposed to use the money they once spent on the military to better meet basic human needs. But has it happened?

In South Africa, this process has been underway since the early 1990s, but it has been uneven and fragile, with contradictory outcomes such as an increased emphasis on arms export and a rise in banditry and criminal gangs. From Defence to Development argues that South Africa must go beyond a narrow conception of the process and focus instead on the redirection of military resources, both human and material, toward sustainable development and environmental restoration. Such a focus would require 

  • Redefining the notion of security to take into account the threats to peace caused by poverty and social dislocation; 
  • Converting the defence industry to civilian production; 
  • Reallocating defence expenditure; 
  • Redeploying troops and retraining ex-combatants in development projects and for environmental protection; and 
  • Redistributing land previously used as military bases. 
For this to happen, there must be extensive public debate on defence and security issues and greater access to information and alternative perspectives. It is in this context that From Defence to Development seeks to make a real and lively contribution.

THE EDITORS

Jacklyn Cock is Professor of Sociology at the University of Witwatersrand,Johannesburg, South Africa. She was a founder of the Group for Environmental Monitoring (GEM) and leader of the IDRC-funded project "Militarization and the Ecology of Southern Africa." 
In Conversation: Jacklyn Cock.

Penny Mckenzie currently coordinates the "Defence and Development" project of the Group for Environmental Monitoring (GEM, South Africa). She also coordinated the IDRC-funded project "Militarization and the Ecology of Southern Africa."

Prev Book(s) 189 of 251 Next

 Document(s)

Foreword Thenjiwe Mtintso 1998


Acknowledgements 1998


List of contributors 1998


1. Introduction. Part 1. Jacklyn Cock 1998


2. Guns or Butter? Growth, Development and Security Gavin Cawthra 1998


3. The 1996 Defence White Paper: An Agenda for State Demilitarisation? Laurie Nathan 1998


4. Reclaiming the Land: A Case Study of Riemvasmaak Penny Mckenzie 1998


5. Weapons testing: Its impact on people and the Environment Penny Mckenzie 1998


6. South Africa’s arms industry: Prospects for Conversion Peter Batchelor 1998


7. Light weapons proliferation: The link between security and development Jacklyn Cock 1998


8. Still killing: Land-mines in Southern Africa Alex Vines 1998


9. Apartheid’s nuclear arsenal: Deviation from development David Fig 1998


10. After the war: Demobilisation in South Africa Tsepe Motumi and Penny Mckenzie 1998


11. Demobilisation and reintegration in society: Human resources conversion Rocky Williams 1998


12. Militarised youth: Political pawns or social agents? Monique Marks and Penny Mckenzie 1998


References 1998




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