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Election Material
Civic Education Material
Voters' Roll Registration Form for Community Elections
This document contains a voter registration form for the 1995 South African community election as well as a flyer encouraging South African’s to register to vote. The one page flyer also mentions issues that elected community officials will deal with.
Election Material
Civic Education Material
Let's Vote Again
Let's Vote Again is a publication focusing on voter registration prior to the 1995 local government elections in South Africa. Made available by the Task Group for Local Government Elections, this document emphasizes the need for citizen's to register to vote to make sure their communities have a chance to be adequately represented at the local level. Information is presented in a storyboard format and key messages are in English as well as 5 local languages.
Election Material
Civic Education Material
Local Government Elections
Published by Y Press in 1995, this brochure explains the significance of local government in South Africa in regards to the individual and the importance of voting in them. “Local Government Elections” also provides basic voter registration information to encourage South Africans to participate in the upcoming October 1995 local government elections.
Election Material
Civic Education Material
Mpumalanga Province Report
A Technical Resources Group (UK) provincial resource officer named Barbara Miller wrote this “Mpumalanga Province Report” that highlights her role in the province as well as how her team functioned with the Communication and Voter Education Task Team she was assigned with in South Africa. The report, which covers the days from March 20th 1995 to November 6th 1995, provides details on Miller’s preparations for the upcoming November 1st, 1995 local government elections.
Election Material
Civic Education Material
Anatomy of Electoral System of Tanzania
The 1995 publication, “Anatomy of Electoral Systems of Tanzania,” was intended to guide all parties involved in the election process including voters, policy makers and election monitors. The document was published in lead up to the October 1995 elections in Tanzania. These elections were significant because they were the first multiparty elections since the nation’s independence in 1962. The literature provides detailed descriptions of the electoral process and of electoral law to voters who otherwise were unaware of the nuances of a multiparty democratic election.
Election Material
Civic Education Material
The Election Watch
This issue of Election Watch in South Africa analyzes voter registration in depth prior to the 1995 local government elections. It includes a section focusing on the province of Kwazulu Natal, and considers measures to combat low voter registration.
Election Material
Civic Education Material
The Next Step: Why are we voting again
The Next Step features a dialogue between two families in order to highlight the prevailing needs of South Africans in advance of the 1995 local government elections. The document also provides basic information about the role and functioning of the Reconstruction and Development Program and an overview of national, provincial, and local government.