The Commonwealth and South Africa: From Smuts to Mandela

When

30/11/2016    
6:30 pm

Where

Chowen Lecture Theatre, Brighton and Sussex Medical School
Falmer, Brighton, Not in USA, BN1 9PX

Event Type

The Commonwealth and South Africa: From Smuts to Mandela

Wednesday 30 November 18:30 until 20:00
Chowen Lecture Theatre, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, University of Sussex BN1 9PX

Speaker: Professor Saul Dubow, Professor of African History
Part of the series: Founding Historians Lecture

The creation of modern South Africa as an independent unitary state within the British empire (c. 1910) gave birth to the Commonwealth idea. Jan Smuts’s views on Commonwealth were formative and they continued to inform the evolution of the organisation until the end of the second world war. Also significant was the role played Afrikaner nationalists who exerted a critical influence on the 1926 Balfour Declaration and Statute of Westminster. At the point of South Africa’s departure from the Commonwealth in 1961, the Commonwealth divided between new entrants, who cast South Africa as a pariah, and older member states who lamented the exit of a troubled family member. Even after South Africa’s departure from the Commonwealth in 1961, apartheid’s significance as the global exemplar of institutionalised racism and colonial rule helped to bind the Commonwealth as a multi-racial organisation with strongly defined ethical values. South Africa’s reintegration in 1994, with Nelson Mandela to the fore, was welcomed as a triumph for the Commonwealth. Paradoxically, however, this proved a pyrrhic victory and may actually have contributed to the Commonwealth’s state of malaise.

This is a free, open lecture – everyone is welcome, but numbers are limited.

To book your place at the lecture please use our booking link: www.sussex.ac.uk/bookalecture, alternatively you can email events@sussex.ac.uk