Justice in South Africa |
PREFACE |
![]() | PART ONE— THE HISTORICAL SETTING |
![]() | Chapter One— Law Enforcement and Race Attitudes in a Slave-Owning Society: The Dutch Settlement at the Cape 1652–1795 |
![]() | Chapter Two— Enter the British Legal Machine: Law, Administration and Race Relations at the Cape 1806–1910 |
• | Introduction |
• | Transition |
• | Liberty, Equality, Servility |
• | Robes and Oxwagons |
• | Barristers and Gentlemen |
• | Attorneys and Law Agents |
• | Magistrates, Justices of the Peace and the Law Department |
• | The Land Register |
• | Law Enforcers: Army and Police |
• | Prisons and Punishment |
• | White Justice |
![]() | Chapter Three— In the Interior: The Administration of Justice and Race Relations in the Boer Republics and the Colony of Natal |
![]() | Chapter Four— The Incorporation of Africans into the Legal Order |
![]() | PART TWO— THE MODERN MACHINE |
![]() | Chapter Five— Judicial Attitudes towards Race in South Africa |
![]() | Chapter Six— The Administration of Justice in a Racially Stratified Society |
![]() | Chapter Seven— Black Attitudes and Actions |
![]() | Chapter Eight— Race Conflict and the Legal System |
![]() | SOURCES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY |
![]() | INDEX |