The Land areas act stipulated certain areas which could be inhabited by blacks and others which were out of bounds for them. Most of the lush country was out of bounds and they were forced to live in small townships and could not be seen in white areas after working hours.
(whites and blacks could not eat in the same restaurants)
Novanet Answer: Whites and Blacks could not eat at the same restaurants.
Apartheid was the official policy of the Southern African government that separated whites and blacks. The policy was heavily criticized by the international community and was eventually abandoned in 1991, though blacks in South Africa were not able to vote in elections until 1993.
This policy was known as apartheid.
Apartheid ("apartness") was a policy of the South African government (National Party) (NP) from 1948 to 1994. The purpose was to keep the various races apart.
Apartheid
Yes. Apartheid was a policy that Mandela fought AGAINST.
Apartheid was a national policy of the central government of South Africa. No policy is a war.
It was called Apartheid. As to what the name apartheid means (literally), I can't tell.
The term 'apartheid' was coined in the late 1930s by the South African Bureau for Racial Affairs (SABRA), which called for a policy of 'separate development' of the races. But the architect behind it was Hendrik Vervood.
Apartheid was not something to be sponsored. It was a policy of (theoretically) separate development of the races and was imposed by the South African government, then controlled by conservative Caucasians, mostly descended from the Boers (Dutch migrants to South Africa).
apartheid
Apartheid was renacted by the Nationalist government in 1948
During the apartheid era in South Africa, black people were discriminated against and forced to live separately from white people. The policy of apartheid in South Africa was characterized by institutionalized racial segregation and discrimination. Nelson Mandela fought against apartheid and worked to bring about equal rights and opportunities for all South Africans.