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Sweden, South Africa and the business of partnership in the 1990s
Author(s) -
Nikolas Glover
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
culture unbound
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2000-1525
DOI - 10.3384/cu.3324
Subject(s) - general partnership , political science , agency (philosophy) , civil society , solidarity , internationalism (politics) , politics , government (linguistics) , delegation , public administration , economic growth , sociology , political economy , social science , law , economics , linguistics , philosophy
This article examines the background and ambitions of the large-scale Swedish-South Africa Partnership Week that was rolled out across South Africa in November 1999. The Swedish delegation was spearheaded by Prime Minister Göran Persson and consisted of 800 Swedes; high-level ministers, diplomats, civil society representatives and business leaders. The analysis places particular emphasis on the involvement of Swedish multinationals and the central role played by the public relations agency Rikta Kommunikation. Its focus lies on the broader pedagogical function that the Week was intended to have, primarily from a Swedish point of view. I argue that the stated aim to forge an economic partnership between Sweden and South Africa as the logical extension of decades of historical political solidarity was a means of ensuring that citizens learned to understand the pressures and demands of the new era of globalisation. The foreseeable end of Swedish aid to South Africa was to be the dawn of self-sustaining economic relations; “business interests” – for so long derided by the anti-apartheid activists – were henceforth to lead the way. In light of this, I conclude by arguing that the official launch and marketing of a bilateral partnership in 1999 can be seen as part of a government-funded effort to adapt Swedish internationalism to a new era.

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