Abstract

This issue of South African Crime Quarterly is a special issue focusing on protest. It is guest edited by Kelley Moult of the Centre for Law and Society at the University of Cape Town.

Highlights

  • This issue of South African Crime Quarterly is a special issue focusing on protest

  • It is guest edited by Kelley Moult of the Centre for Law and Society at the University of Cape Town

  • While post-apartheid democracy should arguably have reduced the impetus for protest, we have instead seen a proliferation of civil disobedience: against service delivery failures, against fees for tertiary education, against corruption, farm murders, fracking and even against our president

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Summary

Introduction

This issue of South African Crime Quarterly is a special issue focusing on protest. It is guest edited by Kelley Moult of the Centre for Law and Society at the University of Cape Town. While we cannot predict how it will all turn out, change is certainly afoot.’ His words remain true, and the articles in this bumper issue of SACQ illustrate the ways that academics, activists, lawyers and practitioners are engaging with questions of protest and response.

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Conclusion
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