Internal colonisation
and an oppressed minority?
The dynamics of relations between Germans and Afrikaners against the background
of constructing a colonial state in Namibia, 1884-1990
Christo Botha
Abstract
The paper aims to demonstrate how the colonial state, ostensibly engaged in
a project designed to promote 'civilisation' and 'development', often struggled
to contain serious disagreements about the nature of the colonial project among
members of the white settler community. The 19th century is touched upon to
demonstrate a state of affairs sharply at odds with recollections about the
period by Europeans. The focus on the German colonial period (1884-1915) points
to certain advances and innovations that the South African Administration, it
is claimed, either ignored or terminated. The first phase of South African rule,
1920-1950, is a record of ideological conflicts in intra- and intergroup contexts.
The post-1950 period demonstrates how South Africa constructed a form of colonial
domination that amounted to establishing Afrikaner hegemony over the public
sector in particular. From a German point of view, this amounted to a case of
de facto internal colonisation.
Journal of Namibian Studies, 2 (2007): 7 - 50