Issue 10 - Second Quarter 1998

Crime, Aids and unemployment point to an ineffective state: Editorial. Highway patrols: With improved intelligence, police are claiming a breakthrough in stemming the spate of dramatic cash-in-transit heists.

The high cost of affirmative action

We need to redress inequalities at work, but experience shows that government's new law will prove costly.

Read More…

Scapegoats for the country's ills

While former guerrillas have been involved in some robberies, their role should not be exaggerated.

Read More…

Highway patrols

With improved intelligence, police are claiming a breakthrough in stemming the spate of dramatic cash-in-transit heists.

Read More…

Carletonville: Working together for health

Brian Williams and Catherine Campbell report on a community that is committed to preventing the spread of HIV/Aids.

Read More…

How to control the Aids epidemic

The disease that threatens a human catastrophe for South Africa is not invincible, say Brian Williams and Catherine Campbell.

Read More…

Archbishop Njongonkulu Ndungane

The new Archbishop of Cape Town will be a stern critic of the government if it fails to deliver on its promises to the poor.

Read More…

Don't damage our health, Mrs Z

The decision to abolish the Medicines Control Council, the public’s watchdog for medicines, has shocked many.

Read More…

Competent white men need not panic

"Equity in employment does not mean affirmative action which has a connotation of tokenism imported from the US."

Read More…

Interview: Ben Ngubane

RW Johnson talks to Ben Ngubane about devolving power to the provinces and Inkatha’s relations with the ANC.

Read More…

Where the parties stand

Lawrence Schlemmer compares the results of three national opinion surveys since 1994.

Read More…

Document Actions