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By Jason Hickel

“But we can’t eat rights, hawu!” Those five words of protest that usher from the lips of South Africa’s underclass sting like a slap in the face. Good liberals will always take offence. We find ourselves scrambling desperately to battle the mad claim that “things were better under apartheid”. “But of what worth is a job,” we retort, somewhat lamely “within a society that defines you as ontologically subhuman?”

The impulse to defend South Africa’s political transformation kicks in like a reflex because we assume the critique to be reactionary, aligned with the propaganda of the old guard, a sure sign that minds remain colonised 15 years after liberation. But it’s not. It’s not a thoughtless dichotomisation of bread against freedom. Alongside the expression of profound disillusionment, this off-hand remark carries an insipient but radical critique of the “rights” paradigm that furnished the parameters for the revolution.

It has become a leitmotif in South African political analysis to point out that something about the revolution went terribly, nightmarishly wrong. The people have seen the hopes they inscribed in the Freedom Charter cruelly dashed, have felt their families crushed by endemic joblessness and their aspirations thwarted by a failing education system and all the while they have watched — bewildered — as glitzy malls rise like tides and the roads swell thick with luxury vehicles. It’s no wonder they want to spit out their rights with contempt like so many shards of glass. Fake jewels. A trick. That’s what betrayal feels like.

But how did this happen? How did it all come to this? The pundits are right to assert that the dawn of democracy left the basic class structures of colonialism and apartheid in place. They are correct to note that the negotiated transition, led by technocrats behind closed doors, left the banks, the mines and the land — all the levers of true power — in the hands of private capital interests. Most of us accept the claim that initiatives like black economic empowerment simply change the hue of the elite but fail to bridge the class inequalities that they pretend to redress.

By fetishising race as the object of revolutionary intervention, the state conveniently sidelines substantive questions of class. We know this. It’s all over the papers; part of the common parlance. Yet nothing changes. The reformers insist that the failures we sense are due merely to problems of implementation, that “rights” are the solution to social inequality. South Africa has the most progressive constitution in the world, they remind us: it’s just a matter of realising the rights that all citizens have been assigned. If we can manage to beef up bureaucracy and expand service delivery, all will be well; the revolution lies therein.

If only it were so simple. In fact, it’s not a question of implementation at all; the pundits have it quite wrong on that point. The real issue is that the whole paradigm of a rights-based revolution is seriously and fundamentally flawed, and cannot serve the ends that South Africa intends it to. Human rights discourse acts as handmaiden to neoliberal economics because rights are — at base — registered in an individual-ontological domain rather than a collective-material one. The state can grant people discursively constituted rights with one hand and strip them of the conditions for sustainable life with the other, without ever having to confront the contradiction.

In this sense, “rights” are a safe reformist option for a capitalist state with a progressive image to maintain. In South Africa, the elite class interests that underpinned apartheid were all too happy to grant this concession because it allowed them to keep their wealth intact; in fact, it allowed them greater latitude for exploitation. The same sleight of hand applies today, a masterful trick of legalese that shifts attention from economy to ontology, depoliticises protest by talking up service delivery and quells discontent by casting a discursive veil of protection over the poor.

The trick consists in the conceptual slippage within the language of rights. There are two basic kinds of rights. Fundamental human rights — such as universal franchise and freedom from discrimination — recognise the ontological equality of all citizens. These rights are non-derogable and limitless in their application. For example, the state can grant everyone the right to speech because speech is not a limited resource. Socio-economic rights, however — such as rights to water, food, and housing — are only “progressively realisable” according to the Constitution and limited by the resources that the state has at its disposal. It is this latter specie with which I am concerned here. The trouble is that it registers in the individual-ontological domain, so that each individual “has” equal rights to water in the same vague, transcendental sense that each individual “has” equal rights to speech.

But the homology makes no sense. Speech and water are two completely different things. Each citizen can exercise the right to speech without impinging on the speech rights of all the others. This does not hold for water, however. If one citizen exercises rights over water in a certain area — if, say, he owns the land from which it springs — he might preclude others from exercising their own rights to water. The same goes for privatised food, housing, and healthcare. Liberty and equality thus exist in constant, irreconcilable tension.

The point is that the individual-ontological structure of “rights” simply will not work for the socio-economic transformations that South Africa is trying to achieve. When it comes to things like water and jobs, we need a fundamental paradigm shift, a transition from the notion of “rights” to the concept of “commons”. Hints of this hide in the Freedom Charter. About natural resources it states, in paraphrase: “The national wealth of the country shall be restored to the people, and industry and trade shall be controlled to assist their wellbeing.” Such words do not rely on the discourse of individual rights. Nor do they hail the spectre of command communism. Instead, they assert the simple point that none have the right to possess and accumulate that which society holds in common. Upholding this basic principle would not mean the abolition of private property or industry, but merely that certain public goods must be understood as commons, and that protections, profits, and benefits should accrue to people accordingly.

Let me be clear: the achievement of universal ontological rights in South Africa has been a marvellous step forward. But it’s time to extend our minds beyond this frontier, to reclaim the heritage of the commons. Rights and service delivery will not save South Africa from the social instability toward which it is rapidly plummeting. While the technocrats shout from the parapets of the Union Buildings “Let them eat rights!” the people burn tyres in the streets below, proclaiming through the flames that they will not be tricked, that history has not yet met its end.

Jason Hickel is a researcher with the University of KwaZulu-Natal.




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9 Responses to “We can’t eat rights!”

Dear Jason

This is a well thought out piece of rhetoric.

Unfortunately, it states no practical suggestions whatsoever.

The statement: “…transition from the notion of “rights” to the concept of “commons”.”, I find rather confusing. When I read a statement like that, I immediately think of Russia in 1917. We all know how that ended.

““The national wealth of the country shall be restored to the people, and industry and trade shall be controlled to assist their wellbeing.” Such words do not rely on the discourse of individual rights. Nor do they hail the spectre of command communism. Instead, they assert the simple point that none have the right to possess and accumulate that which society holds in common.”

So if none have the right to posses (read control) resources, it is up to the government to do so. Sorry, that’s communism in a nutshell. People under communism didn’t have as many rights as in a democracy, but that did not meant that those who died because of government imposed famines had fuller stomachs.

Centralized control of resources has never in my knowledge resulted in those resources being equally distributed.

You waste no time in dismissing the armchair “pundits”, yet you really sound like one yourself. My only practical suggestion is one that unfortunately is most hard to implement (and not exactly a secret):

Educate the population. Properly. Instead of building megalithic stadiums, build SCHOOLS.

(Report abuse)

Liza on January 22nd, 2010 at 4:05 am

The national wealth of the country shall be restored to the people, and industry and trade shall be controlled to assist their wellbeing.” — Sounds like communism to me, you cannot eat sand and there aint no use growing anything on it for more than your own family if it will be controlled by someone else, especially seeing that we are the epicentre of corruption…..

(Report abuse)

me on January 22nd, 2010 at 8:58 am

Supporters of nationalization need to establish a panel of economic and engineering experts to create a thoroughly-researched business plan to sell to the government, showing how government control of, for example, the mines, will increase cost effectiveness, increase output, establish new mines more efficiently and ultimately produce a higher bottom line - ie more money going into the national coffers than currently comes in through taxation. The business plan should cover exactly how government will take over the mines and retain, recruit and train the skilled personnel required to run them. It should also make a no-bullshit assessment of how this action will affect local and global business confidence and perception and what the impact on the economy of this will be. If such a case could be made and it meant more money going into the national coffers which could be used for the upliftment of the poor, I would be 100% in favour but I am highly sceptical. Maybe it is possible but the time for fine words on the subject has long passed - like any venture, evidence of detailed understanding and planning is required for it to even be considered.

(Report abuse)

JH de Villiers on January 22nd, 2010 at 9:09 am

To break things down to simple terms, society should be split into ways that those who do things well get on and do it and leave others to get on and do their things, also well. You mention water, this in SA is a State occupation so any mess ups put the blame on the State/Province/Town not to private capital/neo liberalism/ etc etc. - the “public” is messing up no one else.

What does it mean that the resources should be owned by “the people”, water is owned by “Govt/people” and by your admission is a mess up.

Take mining, surely let private companies exploit their skills and dig up the riches and Govt gets taxs for free (just increase these taxs if not enough is flowing through to “The People”) which it uses for EDUCATION, health, roads, police etc etc not on massive arms deals, and other useless waste of “THE PEOPLES’ tax money.

Since the collapse of Communism in 1990 the broad Left has worked away tirelessly to undermine all other systems (which includes articles like yours) and guess what they are succeeding especially in SA.

If the “PUPLIC” sector would just pull its weight in SA and use its windfall taxes gained (for The People) from the WORKING’ private sector we all win.

Brent

(Report abuse)

brent on January 22nd, 2010 at 9:23 am

Is it not very sad that the destruction of Zimbabwe changed from freedom of the people to ‘the freedom to take over and destroy productive land and the economy’?
Food is the most valuable resouce in the life of any person. In a good country you can have food and freedom. In Zimbabwe they changed from food and freedom to starvation. South Africa seems to support many of the mistakes purposely made in Zimbabwe for who knows what reason other than to stay in power? Any fool knows that if you place an untrained person in charge of anything, you will get a disaster as a result. Look around you in South Africa and see the results of placing untrained and ignorant people in places of influence and control. Politics and food production do not mix. Unproductive land should be passed over to those who can make it productive, not to those who will produce a few votes for the givers in which case everyone loses.

(Report abuse)

Peter Joffe on January 22nd, 2010 at 9:45 am

No, indeed, people cannot eat rights. However, political rights can make it easier to campaign for economic rights. What has gone wrong in South Africa over the past fifteen years is largely that people have gradually, but more and more rapidly over time, lost contact with the capacity to use their political rights. That is why economic rights, instead of being granted, are being eroded.

So, in a sense, you can eat rights; you can translate access to rights into access to food, water, jobs and so forth. But you have to work at it, and be prepared not to be fooled by charlatans.

(Report abuse)

MFB on January 22nd, 2010 at 10:19 am

Theory nearly always sounds better than practice proves to be, simply because practicality can be omitted. Too many South Africans (especially government) use the delightful phrase ‘think outside the box’, despite having no idea where the box begins or ends.
‘Create 1mn jobs’ means nothing. Knowing how and in which sectors they will be created, means far more. Reaching lower targets, but reaching them would be an achievement worthy of consideration.
And yes, you are correct, people can’t eat rights, which is why jobs should have been the only consideration back in 1994. They still should be. When you have to pull yourself upwards, strong muscles are useful. No one gets them without an income.

(Report abuse)

MLH on January 22nd, 2010 at 1:17 pm

Jason, thanks for your intellectual labour - it does educate, something that is often overlooked by those who occasionally criticise the ivory tower (myself included). Thanks specifically for the analytical distinction you make between individual-ontological and collective-material rights. It does bolster your argument and the intuitive argument made by those who don’t yet have the words to articulate something so deeply felt w.r.t. the commons.

I’m hoping that the heart of your message will be understood, without the usual rants about communism, socialism, etc. … but simply that human solidarity and compassion (do unto others as you would have them do unto you) should bve at the centre of political and economic systems … and if nothing exists, we should invent them. We cannot continue to justify inequality either by omission or commission.

@Liza, you’re onto something - maybe public armchair ‘punditting’ can have the unintended consequence of getting policymakers to consider and more ordinary people to participate again. Coz we all have a stake in building a relatively peaceful society.

(Report abuse)

Sarah Henkeman on January 22nd, 2010 at 1:38 pm

Dear Jason,

I thoroughly enjoyed your thoughts. The sudden spike in your readership is a signal that you have hit upon a concern shared by many.

I think, however, that your analysis would be sharpened if you explored the implications of the idea of restoring the national wealth to the commons. You dismiss out of hand the issue of implementation, which doesn’t fit neatly within your opposing conceptual models (collective-material versus individual-ontological ). Yet it is precisely the issue of how we actually implement political theories that separate the grand isms on the left and right of the political spectrum.

The issue of “implementation” is not a conceptually barren area. There are powerful concepts to discover which explain South Africa’s performance since 1994. These concepts include:
* concern with intentions rather than with incentives and constraints.
* concern with vision rather than process.
* the assumption that knowledge is freely and easily obtained versus the assumption that knowledge is costly and difficult to obtain.
* the assumption of omniscience and competence versus the assumption of ignorance and incompetence
* faith in surrogate decision-making versus trust in private individuals to make their own choices in their own contexts.
* anthropomorphic thinking (intentions and articulated plans) versus systemic thinking (spontaneous order and emergent phenomena).
* categorical thinking versus trade-offs.

Read Thomas Sowell for more detail.

If you could bring your intellect to bear on these issues, instead of dismissing the concerns of pundits, I think you will do yourself and your readers a great service.

(Report abuse)

Barry Kayton on January 23rd, 2010 at 9:44 am

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