Jean P. Smith
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The demographic defence of the white nation, 1960–75
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This chapter examines the turn towards active recruitment of white migrants in the 1960s and 1970s in South Africa and Rhodesia, as both nations left the Commonwealth, South Africa on the declaration of republic in 1961 and Rhodesia on the unilateral declaration of independence. It also outlines the inverse, parallel process in the United Kingdom, by which the migration of people of colour from the Commonwealth was progressively restricted beginning with the Commonwealth Immigrants Act of 1962. In South Africa and Rhodesia, policy-makers aimed to create a demographic defence of minority rule as anti-colonial rebellion escalated. British immigration to both countries increased dramatically, reaching a peak in South Africa of more than 25,000 in 1975. Using oral histories and the results of a contemporary sociological study, this chapter argues that a large part of the attraction of South Africa and Rhodesia for white British migrants was the perception that white privilege was more secure in these minority regimes than in the United Kingdom. This is reflected in coded language such as ‘life style’ and ‘opportunity’ as well as more explicit discussions about immigrants of colour changing urban neighbourhoods in the United Kingdom.

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Settlers at the end of empire

Race and the politics of migration in South Africa, Rhodesia and the United Kingdom

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