Marikana and Beyond: New Dynamics in Strikes in South Africa

Type Journal Article - Global Labour Journal
Title Marikana and Beyond: New Dynamics in Strikes in South Africa
Author(s)
Volume 8
Issue 2
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2017
URL https://mulpress.mcmaster.ca/globallabour/article/view/3045
Abstract
Political and social change in South Africa has been crucially shaped by large-scale strikes that have
often taken a violent form. In spite of South Africa establishing a constitutional democracy in 1994 –
and a new vision of industrial relations – violence has become so entangled in institutional life that
South Africa has been described as a “violent democracy”. The massacre of thirty-four striking
workers by heavily-armed police at Marikana in August 2012 was a culmination of this trajectory.
The article explores the possibility of a nonviolent resolution of industrial disputes. This would
require the capability of unions to recognise and strategically use the four dimensions of union
power: structural, institutional, associational and societal. Without such capabilities, power resources
may go unutilised, or be strategically ineffective. The article argues that in post-apartheid South
Africa, associational power has become disconnected from institutional power. Instead of a vital
interaction between the two, the institutions created by the new labour regime have become
disconnected from the organisations that created them.

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