Moral geographies in the post-apartheid era: attitudinal variations in relation to abortion, same sex sexual relationships and capital punishment
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2004
TITLE AUTHOR(S): S.P.Rule
KEYWORDS: DEATH PENALTY, POST APARTHEID SOUTH AFRICA, SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR, Urban environment
Print: HSRC Library: shelf number 3155
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/7660
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/7660
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
-
Related Research Outputs:
- Feminist intellectual activism: within and beyond the academy: constructions of 'whiteness', gender and sexuality in South African magazines
- Identity, law, justice: thinking about sexual rights and citizenship in post-apartheid South Africa
- Rethinking 'masculinities in transition' in South Africa considering the 'intersectionality' of race, class, and sexuality with gender
- Party disintegrations & re-alignments in post-apartheid South Africa
- Pregnancy termination among South African adolescents
- Opening the doors of learning: where is the principal?: a position paper
- Conclusion: emergent perspectives on opposition in South Africa
- Political alliances and parliamentary opposition in post-apartheid South Africa
- Constructions of whiteness, gender, class and sexuality in South African English-medius men's and women's magazines
- The forgotten fifty percent: a review of sexual and reproductive health research and programs focused on boys and young men in Sub-Saharan Africa
- Development funding in South Africa 1998-1999
- Facts, fiction and fabrication: service delivery in South Africa: 1994-1999
- Developing the culture of governance and democracy in South Africa, 1994-1999
- Towards a research agenda: South Africa's soft power in sub-Saharan Africa
- Research on TV violence and sex in SABC programmes
- State of the nation: South Africa 2003-2004
- Pride of Africa
- The South Africans have arrived: post-apartheid corporate expansion into Africa
- The state of local government: third-generation issues
- State-civil society relations in post-apartheid South Africa