This paper critiques the premise that liberal democracy is the antidote for development in South Africa. In an attempt to analyse the consociational elements in the South African polity, the paper seeks to highlight some of the consociational elements that appear to be present in South Africa's democratic society. It argues that their presence accounts for a conducive ground in the implementation of holistic development. Despite the debate on whether South Africa is or was a consociational democracy after apartheid, it is important to pay attention to the degree in which coalition building and power sharing (as important facets of consociationalism) played an influential role towards South Africa's democratic transition. Drawing from the mediation efforts towards power-sharing in South Africa, the paper focuses on the transition period and the negotiations that eventually led to power-sharing in South Africa. The idea is to highlight a historical view that eventually led to a...
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