Chapter 6: Foreign Consultants, Racial Segregation and Dissent: J. L. Sadie and 1960s Southern Rhodesia
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Published:2020
Tinashe Nyamunda, 2020. "Foreign Consultants, Racial Segregation and Dissent: J. L. Sadie and 1960s Southern Rhodesia", Research in the History of Economic Thought and Methodology: Including a Symposium on Economists and Authoritarian Regimes in the 20th Century, Luca Fiorito, Scott Scheall, Carlos Eduardo Suprinyak
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Abstract
Focusing on Johannes L. Sadie, a South African economist hired to investigate the economic options of Southern Rhodesia at the time of the Unilateral Declaration of Independence (UDI), this chapter examines the historical, ideological, pedagogical, and international influences of the intersection between economic discourse and racial ideology. Using the example of the Sadie recommendations, this chapter examines how the changing political context informed the state’s approach to the economy. A reading of the context in which Sadie was hired to justify Rhodesia’s UDI and provide legitimacy to its economic policies sheds light onto the Ian Smith regime’s approach to an alternative post-imperial (but not post-settler) state and economy, but it also speaks of the ways in which economic discourse can be deployed for political purposes by authoritarian regimes.
