Showing 1 - 11 results of 11 for search '"Union of South Africa"', query time: 0.07s Refine Results
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    Public health policy in a time of change and disaster in South Africa: 1910–1920 by Edwin G. Bain, Jan Venter

    Published 2016-09-01
    “…With the establishment of the Union of South Africa in 1910, the central focus of the newly appointed government was to alter and consolidate the policies of the pre-Union colonies that differed materially in many respects and to substitute them with uniform policies that had to be implemented as a consolidated whole for the Union. …”
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    Jan Smuts and the Bulhoek Massacre: Race and state violence in the making of South Africa, 1919-1920s by Bongani Ngqulunga

    Published 2022-12-01
    “…The purpose of this article is to examine the role played by General JC Smuts, the prime minister of the Union of South Africa at the time, in the incident known as the Bulhoek Massacre which took place in May 1921. …”
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    13 May 1915: Bloemfontein’s night of broken glass by Derek du Bruyn, André Wessels

    Published 2016-11-01
    “…In many Allied countries there also followed anti-German protests and riots, including in the Union of South Africa. On 13 May 1915, anti-German riots and the concomitant torching of German businesses took place even in Bloemfontein, where for many decades, people of various cultural groups had lived together in harmony. …”
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    Note sulle reti imperiali britanniche nell’Oceano indiano: i lavoratori a contratto indiani in Natal (1856-1914) by Massimiliano Vaghi

    Published 2019-12-01
    “…In particular, London had not wanted (or could) intervene with the necessary force against the South African elites neither in the 1870s – when resumed a large immigration from India to Natal –, nor after the birth of the Union of South Africa (1910), when the colonial directives about conditions of the Indians could easily be evaded and not applied by the local government, by now de facto independent.…”
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    Untying the Grotian Knot: How Tanaka Kōtarō’s Christian approach to international law disentangled the moral quandary of the South West Africa Cases by Jason Morgan

    Published 2022-07-01
    “…The Petitioners in the Cases, Ethiopia and Liberia, alleged that the Respondent, the Union of South Africa, was failing to abide by the Mandate System under which South Africa had come into possession of the former German territory of South West Africa (today, Namibia). …”
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