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Mobilisation and the power of rural movements : a comparison of the South African National Land Committee with the Brazilian Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem-Terra

MA Cum Laude / Thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts
(International Studies) at Stellenbosch University / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The objective of this thesis is to explain the differing levels of rural activism in Brazil and
South Africa. As both countries are plagued with similar land and poverty disparities, the
varying intensity and national organisation of rural movements is striking. In Brazil a strong
and nationally organised rural movement, the Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem-
Terra (MST), established itself as the leading rural movement; whereas South Africa’s
National Land Committee (NLC) remained weak and ultimately collapsed. Today, South
Africa is characterised by a complete lack of a national representation of rural interests and
shows only timid attempts at the local level. In order to address the issue systematically and
comprehensively, the thesis first provides a historical outline of both countries, thereby
discerning similarities and differences in social, economic and political development.
Subsequently, and based upon these findings, a systematic comparison of the NLC and MST
is conducted. Utilising contemporary social movement theory, a synthesised theoretical
framework of political opportunities, resource mobilisation and framing processes is proposed
to methodically compare movement dynamics. Applying this synthesised framework the
protest cycles of the NLC and the MST are compared, namely the emerging phase, the
stabilisation and decline/resurgence phase.
The study points to a complex network of reasons for varying rural activism. In South
Africa an overall demobilising constellation of important movement dynamics led to the
collapse of the NLC and the weakening of the rural grassroots. Political opportunities changed
from overly exclusive to overly inclusive in South Africa whereby the NLC’s resource
mobilisation became narrowly institutionalised; containing most oppositional forces at the
national and local level. In Brazil, in contrast, political opportunities remained ambivalent
throughout MST existence; thereby providing enough loopholes to achieve partial success and
yet maintaining the critical distance and constraints which necessitates and legitimates
grassroots mobilisation. In Brazil, land distribution has been singled out early as the prime
source for deprivation and consequently served as a vantage point for framing processes
which stimulated a coherent idea of landlessness and the legitimation of land occupations.
The exclusive/inclusive dichotomy of the South African society with its strong racial
overtones led to framing processes which interpret land reform as an exclusive state affair;
thereby discouraging land occupations and merging land with the broad context of social
injustice in South Africa. The thesis concludes that the historically constructed and
contemporarily continued racial dichotomy of South Africa’s society has ultimately hampered
rural movement dynamics in South Africa. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die doel van die tesis is om die verskille in aktivisme dinamiek van
grondhervormingsbewegings in Suid-Afrika en Brasilië te verduidelik. Die verskillende in
terme van nasionale organisasie en intensiteit is merkwaardig gegewe dat beide state
gekenmerk word deur soortgelyke grond en armoede ongelykhede. In Brasilïe is ’n sterk en
nasionaal georganiseerde beweging, die Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais-Sem Terra
(MST) gevestig as die leidende grondhervormingsbeweging, terwyl Suid-Afrika se Nasionale
Grond Komitee (National Land Committee, NLC) swak gebly het en eindelik as ’n beweging
verval het. Suid-Afrika word vandag gekenmerk deur die afwesigheid van ’n nasionale
artikulasie van die belange van grondloses met gebrekkige pogings om hul belange op
plaaslike vlak te verteenwoordig. Ten einde die kwessie sistematies en omvattend aan te
spreek, verskaf die tesis eerstens ’n historiese konteks van die politieke ekonomie van grond
in beide state ten einde verskille en soortgelykhede uit te wys. Hierna word die MST en die
NLC sistematies vergelyk. Deur gebruik te maak van kontemporêre sosiale bewegingsteorie
word ‘n gesintetiseerde teoretiese raamwerk – wat fokus op Politieke Geleenthede, Hulpbron
Mobilisering en Orienteringsprosesse – voorgestel om metodologies die dinamiek van die
bewegings te ontleed. Deur die gesintetiseerde raamwerk toe te pas, word die protes siklusse
van die NLC en die MST vergelyk, naamlik die ontstaan fase, die stabiliseringsfase en die
verval/herlewingsfase.
Die studie ontrafel ‘n kompleks netwerk van redes vir gedifferensieerde grondaktivisme.
In Suid-Afrika het ‘n reeks demoboliserende faktore gelei tot die verval van die NLC en die
verswakking van plattelandse organiasies op voetsoolvlak. Politieke geleenthede het verander
van eksplisiet eksklusief na eksplisiet inklusiewe prosesse waardeur die NLC se basis vir
hulpbron mobilisering baie nou geinstitusionaliseerd geword het en waardeur meeste aktiviste
op nasionale en plaaslike vlak gekoopteer is. In Brasilïe in teenstelling het politieke
geleenthede tydens die MST se bestaan ambivalent gebly en as gevolg daarvan voldoende
ruimte gebied om ‘n kritieke afstand teenoor die staat in te neem. In Brasilïe is
grondhervorming reeds lank gelede geidentifiseer as die oorsaak vir ontneming en het
gevolglik gedien as die basis vir mobilisering rondom grondbesit en die legitimering van
onwettige grond okkupasie. Die eksklusief/inklusief dichotomie van die Suid-Afrikaanse
samelewing met gepaardgaande ras-kompleksiteit het gelei tot prosesse waardeur
grondhervorming as ‘n ekslusiewe staats kwessie gesien is wat daardeur onwettige grond
besettings verminder het en die debat rondom grondhervorming vetroebel het as net nog ‘n
geval van sosiale ongeregtigheid. Daar word tot die gevolgtrekking gekom dat die historiese konstruksie en voortgesette rasse konteks waarbinne grondhervoming in Suid-Afrika
plaasvind, die moontlikheid vir ‘n soortgelyke aktivistiese grondhervormingsbeweging soos
in Brasilïe kniehalter.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:sun/oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/4823
Date03 1900
CreatorsKoch, Regine Erika
ContributorsVan der Westhuizen, J., University of Stellenbosch. Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences. Dept. of Political Science.
PublisherStellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
Languageen_ZA
Detected LanguageUnknown
TypeThesis
RightsUniversity of Stellenbosch

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