Dr Wessel Visser
Right-wing politics and resistance: The mine workers' union and transformation in South Africa 1964-1997.
Labour and right-wing extremism in the South African context - A historical overview
A racially divided class: Strikes in South Africa
Post-hegemonic Afrikanerdom and dispora redefining Afrikaner identity in post apartheid South Africa
From MWU to Solidarity – A trade union reinventing itself
Dr Albert Hertzog se bemoeinis met die mynwerkersunie.
“Exporting trade unionism and labour politics: The British influence on the early South African labour movement.
Afrikaner anti-communist history production in South African historiography
Strikes in the Netherland and South Africa, 1900-1998: A comparison.
Coming to terms with the past and the present:
Afrikaner experience of and reaction to the “new” South Africa.
Workers' Strife: The uneasy electoral relationship between socialists and the
South African Labour Party, 1910-1924.
“Shifting RDP into GEAR”. The ANC government’s dilemma in
providing an equitable system of social security for the “new” South Africa.
The South African labour movement’s responses to declarations of martial law, 1913-1922.
The Star in the East: South African Socialist Expectations and Responses to the Outbreak of the Russian Revolution.
White labour aristocracy and black proletariat: The origins and deployment of South Africa's racially divided working class.
Trends in South African historiography and the present state of historical research.
Urbanization and Afrikaner class formation: The Mine Workers’ Union and the
search for a cultural identity.
“To Fight the Battles of the Workers”. The Emergence of pro-strike publications in early twentieth-century South Africa.
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