Although the dawn of democracy promised a new beginning in South Africa, lingering effects of Apartheid remained, including the struggle to address gang violence and gender-based violence amidst the backdrop of widespread organised crime and corruption, social inequality, a sluggish economy, and poor service delivery. The last policy-National Anti-Gangsterism Strategy (2017)-required implementation at provincial level. This study examines the Western Cape policy content and deconstructs the concept of gangsterism. The paper shows that sustained anti-gang strategies and interventions demand structural obstacles and inequality are addressed in the context of the spill-over from the Apartheid era. Notably, it will be concluded that there are long-term benefits of reframing the problem of gangsterism in the Western Cape as ‘a youth-at-risk-crisis’ with specific attention gender-sensitivity to contribute to local peacebuilding by focusing on youth to exert agency and become empowered in pursuit of individual and community resilience and active citizenry.
CITATION STYLE
Viltoft, C. D. (2022). Deconstructing Gangsterism in South Africa: Uncovering the Need for Gender-Sensitive Policies. Cosmopolitan Civil Societies, 14(3), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.5130/ccs.v14.i3.7985
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