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A history of the Ottery School of Industries in Cape Town: issues of race, welfare and social order in the period 1937 to 1968

The primary task of this thesis is to explain the establishment of the 'correctional institution', the Ottery School of Industrues, in Cape Town in 1948 and the programmes of rehabilitation, correctional and vocational training and residential care that the institution developed in the period until 1968. This explanation is located in the wider context of debates about welfare and penal policy in South africa. The overall purpose is to show how modernist discourses in relation to social welfare, delinquency and education came to South Africa and was mediated through a racial lens unique to this country. In doing so the thesis uses a broad range of material and levels from the ethnographic to the documentary and historical. The work seeks to locate itself at the intersection of the fields of education, history, welfare, penalty and race in South Africa.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:UNWC/oai:UWC_ETD:http%3A%2F%2Fetd.uwc.ac.za%2Findex.php%3Fmodule%3Detd%26action%3Dviewtitle%26id%3Dinit_4706_1173678863
Date January 2001
CreatorsBadroodien, Azeem
Source SetsUniv. of Western Cape
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeTheses and Dissertations
FormatPDF
CoverageZA
RightsCopyright: University of the Western Cape

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