The Apartheid System: Institutionalized Racial Segregation
How South Africa built one of the most comprehensive systems of racial oppression in modern history.
The Architecture of Segregation
Apartheid — Afrikaans for 'apartness' — became official policy when the National Party won South Africa's 1948 election on an explicitly racist platform. But racial segregation predated 1948: the 1913 Natives Land Act had already restricted Black land ownership to 7% of the country's territory.
After 1948, the National Party built an elaborate legal architecture of racial classification and separation. The Population Registration Act (1950) classified every South African by race — White, Black, Coloured, or Indian. The Group Areas Act forced different races into separate residential zones. Pass laws required Black South Africans to carry identity documents and restricted their movement into white areas. The Bantu Education Act deliberately provided inferior education to Black children.
The system was enforced through a powerful security apparatus, including the notorious Security Branch police, informer networks, detention without trial, and the suppression of political opposition.