Justice in South Africa

  PREFACE

 collapse sectionPART ONE—  THE HISTORICAL SETTING
 expand sectionChapter One—  Law Enforcement and Race Attitudes in a Slave-Owning Society:  The Dutch Settlement at the Cape 1652–1795
 collapse sectionChapter 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
 expand sectionChapter Three—  In the Interior:  The Administration of Justice and Race Relations in the Boer Republics and the Colony of Natal
 expand sectionChapter Four—  The Incorporation of Africans into the Legal Order

 collapse sectionPART TWO—  THE MODERN MACHINE
 expand sectionChapter Five—  Judicial Attitudes towards Race in South Africa
 expand sectionChapter Six—  The Administration of Justice in a Racially Stratified Society
 expand sectionChapter Seven—  Black Attitudes and Actions
 expand sectionChapter Eight—  Race Conflict and the Legal System

 expand sectionSOURCES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY
 expand sectionINDEX

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