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Journal ArticleDOI

The sanitation syndrome: Bubonic plague and urban native policy in the Cape colony, 1900-1909.

Maynard W. Swanson
- 01 Jul 1977 - 
- Vol. 18, Iss: 3, pp 387-410
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TLDR
‘The sanitation syndrome’, equating black urban settlement, labour and living conditions with threats to public health and security, became fixed in the official mind, buttressed a desire to achieve positive social controls, and confirmed or rationalized white race prejudice with a popular imagery of medical menace.
Abstract
Infectious disease and concepts of public health, operating as societal metaphors, seem to have exercised a powerful influence on the origins and development of urban segregation in South Africa. Between 1900 and 1904 bubonic plague, threatening major centres, occasioned the mass removal of African urban populations to hastily established locations at the instigation of medical authorities and other government officials under the emergency provisions of the public health laws. Inchoate urban policy, under tentative consideration since the 1890s as economic development and social change began to stimulate black urban migration, was precipitated by this episode into specific legislation and permanent administration. Cape Town and Port Elizabeth were the two foci of this development in the Cape Colony, where the government locations at Ndabeni and New Brighton exemplify the process. These moves and the effort to consolidate them were to a large degree frustrated by practical administrative, legal, economic and human factors which have characterized the anomalies and contradictions of urban location policy ever since. A black ‘middle class’ resisted the loss of property rights and clung to aspirations of economic and social mobility or legal independence. Especially at Port Elizabeth, where independent peri-urban settlements proliferated, white officials and politicians laboured in an administrative and legal quagmire. White employers and black migrants proved only marginally amenable to location concepts modelled on the principles of quarantine. But ‘the sanitation syndrome’, equating black urban settlement, labour and living conditions with threats to public health and security, became fixed in the official mind, buttressed a desire to achieve positive social controls, and confirmed or rationalized white race prejudice with a popular imagery of medical menace. These issues of urban social order would be repeated again in connexion with such dire events as the 1918 influenza epidemic as the foundations of Union-wide policy and law were laid during and after World War I.

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Citations
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Climatic Change and Rural-Urban Migration: The Case of Sub-Saharan Africa

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the role that climate change has played in the pattern of urbanization in sub-Saharan African countries compared to the rest of the developing world and find that this link has become stronger since decolonization, which is likely due to the often simultaneous lifting of legislation prohibiting the free internal movement of native Africans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Another Politics of Life is Possible

TL;DR: In this article, a closer analysis of the courses he gave at the College de France on this topic, as well as of the other seminars and papers of this period, shows that he took a quite different direction, restricting it to the regulation of population.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climatic Change and Rural-Urban Migration: The Case of Sub-Saharan Africa

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the role that climate change has played in the pattern of urbanization in sub-Saharan African countries compared to the rest of the developing world and find that this link has become stronger since decolonization, which is likely due to the often simultaneous lifting of legislation prohibiting the free internal movement of native Africans.
Book

African Cities: Alternative Visions of Urban Theory and Practice

Garth Myers
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the postmetropolis is Lusaka, and what if the post metropolis is a Wounded City and the Wounded city is a Postmetropolis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thinking between the Posts: Postcolonialism, Postsocialism, and Ethnography after the Cold War

TL;DR: The Second Congress of the Third International as mentioned in this paper was a seminal moment in the history of anti-imperialism in social history, with the aim of making the oppressed of the world a historical subject.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Establishment of the Medina in Dakar, Senegal, 1914

Raymond F. Betts
- 01 Apr 1971 - 
TL;DR: In the case of the city of Dakar, Senegal, the policy of residential segregation replaced the earlier pattern of coexistence, if not integration, of the African and European populations as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Urban Origins of Separate Development

TL;DR: One view of the genesis of separate development, in relation to the urban areas of South Africa, is that it sprang to life in the Natives (Urban Areas) Act of 1923, under the stimulus of industrial expansion caused by World War I as discussed by the authors.