Publication | Closed Access
Reordering Society: Vigilantism and Expressions of Sovereignty in Port Elizabeth's Townships
93
Citations
11
References
2006
Year
Historical GeographyCriminal CodeColonialismAfrican LawSouth African HistoryDecolonialityLawCriminal LawSocial SciencesFormal LawSettler ColonialismPort ElizabethUrban GovernanceSouth AfricaUrban HistoryUrban PoliticsOrganized CrimeInternational LawHuman Rights LawComparative CriminologyCriminal JusticeState CrimeInternational CriminologyPolitical GeographyTransitional JusticeLegal HistoryPolitical Science
Crime and vigilantism in South Africa are generally seen as a reaction to the breakdown of formal law. Both are constituted outside the state and emerge when the new social contract has been broken — that is, when the state can no longer provide security. This article argues that there is often an intimate relationship between vigilante formations and state structures. It explores this apparent paradox through public discourses on crime and the emergence of twilight institutions such as vigilante groups. It suggests that vigilantism has to be analysed as an attempt to promulgate a new legal-political order, despite being constructed outside this order. This argument is explored in the context of the Amadlozi, a vigilante group operating in the townships of Port Elizabeth. The article situates this discussion within an examination of discourses on crime, as well as the production of township residents and their protection from crime. Finally, it proffers some ideas on sovereignty and its relationship to twilight institutions.
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