Political apathy amongst students: A case study of Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University

The primary motivation for this research, in which a qualitative method was employed, was to examine political apathy amongst students at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University. The secondary motivation was to question whether youth political apathy threatens the consolidation of democracy. The rese...

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Main Authors: Ntsikelelo B. Breakfast, Gavin Bradshaw, Richard Haines
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2017-09-01
Series:Africa’s Public Service Delivery & Performance Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.apsdpr.org/index.php/apsdpr/article/view/172
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spelling doaj-4f762847be8e46d6a4c84a8806efd7442020-11-25T00:40:39ZengAOSISAfrica’s Public Service Delivery & Performance Review2310-21952310-21522017-09-0151e1e810.4102/apsdpr.v5i1.172143Political apathy amongst students: A case study of Nelson Mandela Metropolitan UniversityNtsikelelo B. Breakfast0Gavin Bradshaw1Richard Haines2Department of Political Science (Military), Stellenbosch UniversityDepartment of Political and Government Studies, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan UniversityDepartment of Development Studies, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan UniversityThe primary motivation for this research, in which a qualitative method was employed, was to examine political apathy amongst students at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University. The secondary motivation was to question whether youth political apathy threatens the consolidation of democracy. The researchers arranged four focus groups at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University. A purposive sampling technique was utilised. All 50 participants in the study were Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University undergraduate and postgraduate black students, with ages ranging from 21 to 35 years. The researchers encouraged participants to have maximum participation in the focus group deliberations. The researchers also made use of elite interviews in the study. The findings of this study suggest that political apathy does exist amongst students at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University. Most of the participants in the focus groups indicated that young people in post-apartheid South Africa have no interest in politics.http://www.apsdpr.org/index.php/apsdpr/article/view/172political apathy amongst studentsNelson Mandela Metropolitan University
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ntsikelelo B. Breakfast
Gavin Bradshaw
Richard Haines
spellingShingle Ntsikelelo B. Breakfast
Gavin Bradshaw
Richard Haines
Political apathy amongst students: A case study of Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
Africa’s Public Service Delivery & Performance Review
political apathy amongst students
Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
author_facet Ntsikelelo B. Breakfast
Gavin Bradshaw
Richard Haines
author_sort Ntsikelelo B. Breakfast
title Political apathy amongst students: A case study of Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
title_short Political apathy amongst students: A case study of Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
title_full Political apathy amongst students: A case study of Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
title_fullStr Political apathy amongst students: A case study of Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
title_full_unstemmed Political apathy amongst students: A case study of Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
title_sort political apathy amongst students: a case study of nelson mandela metropolitan university
publisher AOSIS
series Africa’s Public Service Delivery & Performance Review
issn 2310-2195
2310-2152
publishDate 2017-09-01
description The primary motivation for this research, in which a qualitative method was employed, was to examine political apathy amongst students at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University. The secondary motivation was to question whether youth political apathy threatens the consolidation of democracy. The researchers arranged four focus groups at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University. A purposive sampling technique was utilised. All 50 participants in the study were Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University undergraduate and postgraduate black students, with ages ranging from 21 to 35 years. The researchers encouraged participants to have maximum participation in the focus group deliberations. The researchers also made use of elite interviews in the study. The findings of this study suggest that political apathy does exist amongst students at Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University. Most of the participants in the focus groups indicated that young people in post-apartheid South Africa have no interest in politics.
topic political apathy amongst students
Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
url http://www.apsdpr.org/index.php/apsdpr/article/view/172
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