Enter your keyword

Briefing Paper 556 – Xenophobia – An Ever-Present Danger by Peter-John Pearson

As part of his Heritage Day speech this year, President Cyril Ramaphosa emphasised that xenophobia has no place in our heritage. He said that South Africans were a welcoming and hospitable people: “Our heritage is also the best version of ourselves that we seek to become. I am referring here to ubuntu, which speaks to […]

Briefing Paper 555 – Safe Relinquishment: Finding Solutions to SA’s Child-Abandonment and Late-Term Abortion Crisis by Lois Law

High levels of crisis pregnancies in South Africa and limited options lead large numbers of desperate girls and women to abandon their babies in unsafe circumstances, or to seek late-term abortions, which often result in the mother’s death, over and above that of the baby. The availability of ‘baby savers’ as a safe relinquishment option […]

Response – 12th October 2022 – Siding with the Mafia by Mike Pothier

It has become notorious in recent years that construction companies embarking on new projects have had to agree to take on a certain number of labourers nominated by local ‘businesspeople’ or, alterna- tively, to commit to purchasing building materials from the same source. Where companies resisted, they found their workers threatened and intimidated and even […]

Refugee Digest 70 – Migrants, Refugees and Displaced Persons

Over the past week or two there have been significant events in the world of mobile communities in South Africa. The Minister of Home Affairs rather unexpectedly extended the validity of the Zimbabwe Exemption Permits, which met with very different responses. Secondly, Operation Dudula, which has hitherto used strategies around mobilisation and various forms of […]

Refugee Digest 69 – Migrants, Refugees and Displace Persons by Peter-John Pearson

Of great significance, the Minister of Home Affairs, Dr Aaron Motsoaledi, has announced that at the end of 2023 the Lesotho Special Permits will not be renewed. This follows a similar decision regarding the Zimbabwean Exemption Permits. The Minister has indicated that this is part of an overall redesign of migration policy. The Lesotho permits […]

Briefing Paper 554 – Ecojustice and Voices of Faith by Lovedonia Mkansi

As the world seems to be coming out of the woods with the COVID-19 pandemic, a number of familiar challenges are slowly beginning to re-gain traction on the global scene. The advent of 2022 was marked by the unfolding of some important conferences, including the UN Biodi- versity Conference; the Desertification Confer- ence; and the […]

Environment Digest 39 – Plastic Pollution by Lovedonia Mkansi

Half of all plastic products are designed to be used just once and thrown away, and most of them have become an integral part of our everyday, convenient lives. Some of the most common single-use plastic items include plastic bottles, food packaging, plastic straws and cutlery, fast fashion clothing, and plastic grocery bags. These plastics […]

Economic Digest 32 – What Grey-listing will mean for SA by Kenny Pasensie

In 2001 an intergovernmental organisation, the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), conducted a Mutual Evaluation Assessment on South Africa and found that the country has poor legal, regulatory, and oper- ational measures for combating money laundering and terrorist financing. This means that South Africa is at risk of being put on the FATF’s ‘grey list’, […]

Response – 13th September 2022 – An Extension, but far from a Resolution… by Peter-John Pearson

On 2nd September the Department of Home Affairs issued a communique advising that the Minister had extended the validity of the Zimbabwe Exemption Permits (ZEPs) to 30th June, 2023; they had been due to expire on 31st December, 2022. The spokesperson indicated that there would be no further extensions after the June deadline, and the […]