The roots of xenophobia in 19th century imperialism

Authors

  • Juergen Schraten University of Giessen
  • Sean Maliehe University of the Free State

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18820/24150479/aa54i2/5

Keywords:

economic history, imperialism, law, property, xenophobia

Abstract

The contribution provides an explanation of inner-African xenophobia as being rooted in the countermovements to 19th century imperialism. Distinctive property rights constituted different modes of production and notions of a common society among Basotho and Tswana people on the one hand and Trekboers on the other, which made them resist the incorporation into an imperial world market by the British Empire. Although the moderate expansive mode of Basotho and Batswana seemed more compatible with the free market approach of the Britons than the exclusive property concept of the Trekboer, the political result was different. We argue that finally the British expansion without conquest could be allied with the Trekboer conquest without integration due to the invention of SACU as the first customs union of the world, which began as Customs Union Convention in 1889. It allowed for a continuation of a pre-Enlightenment exclusionary property right that fuels xenophobia until today.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Aguda A. 1973. Legal development in Botswana from 1885 to 1966. Botswana Notes and Records 5: 52-63.

Akinola AO. 2018. Introduction: understanding xenophobia in Africa. In: Akinola AO (ed). The political economy of xenophobia. Cham: Springer Publishing.

Anderson B. 1991. Imagined communities. London and New York, NY: Verso Books.

Arendt H. 1973. The origins of totalitarianism. San Diego, CA, New York, NY and London: Harcourt Brace and Company.

Ashton H. 1967. The Basuto. London, New York, NY and Toronto: Oxford University Press.

Beinart W and Dubow S. 2021. The scientific imagination in South Africa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Brobbey C A-B. 2018. Democratization and legitimization of xenophobia in Ghana. In: Akinola AO (ed). The political economy of xenophobia. Cham: Springer Publishing.

Casalis E. 1861. The Basutos. London: James Nisbet and Co.

Comaroff J and Comaroff J. 1991. Of revelation and revolution, Volume one. Chicago, IL and London: The University of Chicago Press.

Denoon D. 1999. Dependence and interdependence: Southern Africa, 1500-1800. In: Ogot BA (ed). General history of Africa, Volume V. Oxford: James Currey.

Du Toit A and Giliomee H. 1983. Afrikaner political thought: analysis and documents, Volume one 1780-1850. Berkeley, CA, Los Angeles, CA, and London: University of California Press.

Duncan P. 1960. Sotho law and customs. Cape Town: Oxford University Press.

Eldredge EA. 2007. Power in colonial Africa. Madison, WI: The University of Wisconsin Press.

Eybers GvW. 1918. Select constitutional documents illustrating South African history, 1795-1910. London: George Routledge and Sons.

Fanon F. 2001. The wretched of the earth. London: Penguin Classics.

Ferguson J. 2015. Give a man a fish. Durham, NC and London: Duke University Press.

Germond RC. 1967. Chronicles of Basutoland: a running commentary on the events of the years 1830-1902 by the French Protestant missionaries in Southern Africa. Morija: Morija Sesuto Book Depot.

Gibb R. 2006. The New Southern African Customs Union Agreement: dependence with democracy. Journal of Southern African Studies 32(3): 583-603.

Gumbi V. 2022. Operation Dudula, Afrophobia and the quest for human rights. Mail and Guardian. 29 March. Available at: https://mg.co.za/opinion/2022-03-29-operation-dudula-afrophobia-and-the-quest-for-human-rights/ [accessed on 30 May 2022].

Guyer J. 1993. Wealth in people and self-realization in Equatorial Africa. Man 28(2): 243-265.

Hahlo HR and Kahn E. 1960. The Union of South Africa. London: Steven and Sons Ltd.

Harlow VT. 1963. Cape Colony, 1806-1822. In: Eric Walker (ed). The Cambridge history of the British Empire, Volume VIII. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Hodgson M L. 1932. Bechuanaland Protectorate. Lovedale: Lovedale Press.

Jackson EM. 1906. Statuses of the Cape of Good Hope, 1652-1905. Cape Town: Cape Times Limited, Government Printers.

Jeppe F. 1887. De Locale Wetten der Zuid Afrikaansche Republiek 1849-1885. Pretoria: JF Celliers.

Keegan T. 1986. Trade, accumulation and impoverishment: mercantile capital and the economic transformation of Lesotho and the Conquered Territory, 1870-1920. Journal of Southern African Studies 12(2): 198.

Lundahl M and Peterson L. 1992. The dependent economy: Lesotho and the Southern African Customs Union. New York: Taylor and Francis Group.

Maasdorp G. 1989. A century of customs union in Southern Africa, 1889-1986. Paper presented at the conference of the Economic Society of South Africa, Johannesburg, September 1989.

Macmillan WM. 1963. Bantu, Boer and Briton. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Madubela A. 2021. No extension to expiring Zimbabwean exemption permits – cabinet. Mail and Guardian. 25 November. Available at: https://mg.co.za/news/2021-11-25-no-extension-to-expiring-zimbabwean-exemption-permits-cabinet/ [accessed on 31 May 2022].

Maliehe S. 2021a. Commerce as politics. Oxford: Berghahn Books.

Maliehe S. 2021b. Self-organisation in the struggle for economic democracy in colonial and postcolonial Lesotho, 1870s-2010s. Journal of Southern African Studies. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03057070.2022.2066298.

Mamdani M. 1996. Citizen and subject. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

Marx K and Engels F. 1976. Manifesto of the Communist Party. In: Marx K and Engels F (eds). Collected works, Volume 6. London: Lawrence and Wishart Limited.

Mpofu-Walsh S. 2021. The new apartheid. Cape Town: Tafelberg.

Neocosmos M. 2010. From ‘foreign natives’ to ‘native foreigners’. Dakar: CODESRIA.

Ngcukaitobi T. 2018. The land is ours. Cape Town: Penguin.

Njotini M. 2017. Examining the object of property rights – lessons from the Roman, Germanic and Dutch legal history. 2017 De Jure: 135-155.

Nyamnjoh FB. 2006. Insiders and outsiders. Dakar: CODRESIA.

Okihiro GY. 1973. Resistance and accommodation: baKwena – baGasechele 1842-52. Botswana Notes and Records 5: 104-116.

Oloruntoba S. 2018. Crisis of identity and xenophobia in Africa: the imperative of pan-African thought liberation. In: Akinola AO (ed). The political economy of xenophobia. Cham: Springer Publishing.

Palmer RC. 1985. The origins of property in England. Law and History Review 3(1): 1-50.

Parsons TH. 2014. The second British Empire: in the crucible of the twentieth century. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers.

Plaatje ST. 1982. Native life in South Africa. Johannesburg: Ravan Press.

Polanyi K. 2001. The great transformation. Boston, MA: Beacon Press.

Ramsay J. 1991. The Batswana-Boer War of 1852-53: how the Batswana achieved victory. Botswana Notes and Records 23: 193-207.

SACU. 2021. Southern African Customs Union in figures, 2020. Windhoek: Revenue Management Sub-Directorate.

Schapera I. 1953. The Tswana. London: International African Institute.

Schapera I. 1955. A handbook of Tswana law and custom. London, New York, NY, and Cape Town: Oxford University Press.

Sinnema D. 2011. The Canons of Dordt: from judgement on Arminianism to confessional standard. In: Gourdiaan A and Van Lieburg F (eds). Revisiting the Synod of Dordt (1618-1619). Leiden and Boston, MS: Brill, pp. 313-333.

South African Government. 2022. Apply for permanent residency permit. Available at: https://www.gov.za/services/permanent-residence/apply-permanent-residency-permit [accessed on 30 May 2022].

Strathern M. 1999. What is intellectual property after? In: Law J and Hassard J (eds). Actor network theory and after. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.

Tandwa L. 2022. Anarchy reigns: Police on high alert as Operation Dudula gains momentum. Mail and Guardian from 8 April 2022. https://mg.co.za/news/2022-04-08-anarchy-reigns-police-on-high-alert-as-operation-dudula-gains-momentum/ [accessed on 30 May 2022].

Tella O. 2018. South African higher education: the paradox of soft power and xenophobia. In: Akinola AO (ed). The political economy of xenophobia. Cham: Springer Publishing.

Thabane M. 2002a. Aspects of colonial economy and society. In: Pule NW and Thabane M (eds). Essays on aspects of the political economy of Lesotho, 1500-2000. Roma: Department of History, National University of Lesotho.

Thabane M. 2002b. Reconsidering the motives for colonisation. In Pule NW and Thabane M (eds). Essays on aspects of the political economy of Lesotho, 1500-2000. Roma: Department of History, National University of Lesotho.

Thabane M. 2017. Towards an identification of historical roots of Lesotho's political instability. In: Thabane M (ed). Towards an anatomy of persistent political instability in Lesotho. Roma: National University of Lesotho.

Theal G. 1883. Basutoland Records: Volume I. Cape Town: Struik.

Theal GM. 1908. History of South Africa since September 1795. London: Swan Sonnenschein.

Thomas PJ, Van der Merwe CG and Stoop BC. 2000. Historical foundations of South African private law. Durban, Cape Town and Johannesburg: Lexis Nexis.

Thompson L. 2001. The history of South Africa. New Haven, CT and London: Yale University Press.

Thompson RJ and Nicholls BM. 1993. The Glen Grey Act: forgotten dimensions in an old theme. South African Journal of Economic History 8(2): 58-70.

Van den Bergh R. 2012. The remarkable survival of Roman-Dutch law in nineteenth-century South Africa. Fundamina 18(1): 71-91.

Van der Merwe CG, du Plessis J, de Waal M, Zimmermann R and Farlam P. 2014. The Republic of South Africa. In: Palmer VV (ed). Mixed jurisdictions worldwide. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Van Zyl CH. 1907. The Batavian and the Cape Plakaten. South African Law Journal 24(2): 132-147.

Watermeyer EF. 1963. The Roman-Dutch law in South Africa. In: Walker EA (ed). The Cambridge history of the British Empire, Volume VIII. Cambridge: Cambridge at the University Press.

Weber M. 1978. Economy and society. Berkeley, CA, Los Angeles, CA and London: Berkely University Press.

##submission.downloads##

Published

2022-11-28