This chapter discusses South Africa's political culture following the end of apartheid in 1994. Central to successful democratic consolidation is the ability of a fragmented polity to construct a national identity and sense of nationhood founded on a common culture. In the South African context, however, national identity construction is based on the principle of unity in diversity. This means that given the diversity of cultural-linguistic and religious communities, the post-apartheid South African state attempted to construct a national identity that respects the equality of diverse people and is founded on a multiculturalist world view. The South African Constitution commits South African political society to a political culture rooted in a strong human rights tradition. The doctrine of non-racialism as an ideology can serve to unite a fragmented South African society. Born from the Freedom Charter, which envisioned a South Africa that belongs to all who live in it, black and white, the doctrine of non-racialism follows a world view that does not recognise race (in other words legal access, public services and opportunities need to be available to all irrespective of race).
Human Sciences Research Council (Fri,) studied this question.