Institute for Race Relations fails to propose birth control to stop surplus-people growth who now put an excessive strain on shrinking food supplies:
report notes that Born Frees - young blacks born after 1990 - will increasingly become more involved in violent riots, abandon democratic institutions and fail to register as voters.
Source: http://irr.org.za/reports-and-publications/occasional-reports/files/irr-report-2013-born-free-but-still-in-chains-april-2015.pdf
economic alienation." Please contact Mienke Steytler on 011 482 7221 ext. 2003 or mienke@sairr.org.za or Gerbrandt van Heerden (ext. 2004, gvanheerden@sairr.org.za) for interview or further information
requests. Kind Regards, Mienke Mari Steytler Head of Media and Public Affairs t: +27 (0) 11 482 7221 ext. 2003 c: +27 (0) 78 091 1374
http://irr.org.za/reports-and-publications/occasional-reports/born-free-but-still-in-chains-south-africa2019s-first-post-apartheid-generation
" Born free but still in chains: South Africa’s first post-apartheid generation
Born frees, people born after 1990, will increasingly become more involved in violent protests, and abandon democratic institutions, due to ongoing political and economic alienation.
This is according to the South African Institute of Race Relations’ (IRR) Born free but still in chains: South Africa’s first post-apartheid generation report. The report provides an investigation into the extent of this alienation and what can be done to include born frees politically, economically and socially. The report was released in Johannesburg on the 29th of April 2015.
http://irr.org.za/reports-and-publications/occasional-reports/born-free-but-still-in-chains-south-africa2019s-first-post-apartheid-generation
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