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SASO till SASCO - South African History Online 1968 December SASO is formed at the conference held in Marianhill, Natal The conference was exclusively attended by Black students 1969 July 1 SASO is officially inaugurated at the Turfloop campus of the University of the North (UNIN) with Steve Bantu Biko as its first President and Barney Pityana as Secretary 1970 July The first General Council (GC) of SASO is held in Natal 1971 SASO
South African National Students Congress (SANSCO) After a week of deliberations SANSCO and NUSAS merged to form the South African Students Congress (SASCO) At the end of the gathering SASCO was formally launched on 6 September 1991
Malusi Nkanyezi Gigaba - South African History Online During this period Gigaba became involved in various student and youth organisations such as Congress of South African Students (COSAS), the South African Youth Congress (SAYCO), the South African Student Congress (SASCO) and Young Christian Students (YCS)
Student Politics in the Era of Democracy - South African History Online During the 1990-1994 period of political liberalisation and negotiations leading to the first democratic elections the South African Students Organisation (SASCO) continued the tradition of militant student politics of SASO and SANSCO However, in the past decade there have been important changes in political conditions that have affected the politics and activities of SASCO During the 1990
Student Politics: SASO till SANSCO - South African History Online AZASO-COSAS-NUSAS student boycotts 1986 AZASO becomes the South African National Student Congress (SANSCO) 1988 SANSCO is restricted under the State of Emergency 1991 6 September, SANSCO and NUSAS merge to form South African Student Congress (SASCO) at Rhodes University in Grahamstown, Eastern Cape
Chapter 3 - SASO: The Ideology and Politics of Black Consciousness For white South Africans the late 1960s was a time of political calm, rising living standards, prosperity and sharing in the sustained economic boom of that period Some blacks shared in the bounty, those for whom the opportunities for the accumulation of wealth, power and privilege through the bantustan and separate development programme proved irresistible For white South Africans the late
Congress of South African Students (COSAS) - South African History Online The Congress of South African Students (COSAS) was established in June 1979 as a national organization to represent the interests of Black school students in the wake of the Soweto uprisings During its formation the South African Student Movement (SASM) and other organizations of the Black Consciousness (BC) movement were banned by the apartheid government COSAS organized students at