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Saving Apartheid

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This groundbreaking book tells the story of how a transatlantic pro-apartheid movement attempted to defend white rule in South Africa—and forged enduring links between global conservatism and white...
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  • 17 March 2026
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During the 1980s, as global antiapartheid sentiment grew, an international coalition of far-right activists arose to preserve racial hierarchy in South Africa and beyond. This groundbreaking book tells the story of how a transatlantic pro-apartheid movement attempted to defend white rule in South Africa—and forged enduring links between global conservatism and white power.

By mapping an international network of white supremacist organizations, Augusta Dell’Omo reveals a fundamental shift in far-right organizing in response to changing geopolitical realities. The pro-apartheid movement brought together a range of figures who sought to influence the conservative Western governments they saw as allies. As antiapartheid activism grew, the South African regime crumbled, and the post–Cold War order took shape, apartheid’s defenders adapted their ideology for a colorblind, human rights–centric, and neoliberal world. Their successes and failures shaped the antistatist trajectory of white supremacist organizing in the 1990s and beyond, planting the seeds for a global resurgence of the far right.

Saving Apartheid ranges from Reagan’s Oval Office to South Africa’s bantustans and from white women’s grassroots organizing to evangelical broadcasting, illuminating how an unlikely coalition reimagined white supremacy. Uncovering the surprising influence of apartheid’s defenders, this book offers a prehistory of the present.

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Price: $38.00
Pages: 408
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Global America
Publication Date: 17 March 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231215893
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

HISTORY / Africa / South / Republic of South Africa, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Conservatism & Liberalism, HISTORY / United States / 20th Century

In this timely book on the rise of the global right, Augusta Dell’Omo uncovers the largely ignored far-right networks that mobilized to save South Africa’s racist regime in the 1970s and ’80s. Saving Apartheid is original, insightful, and vitally important history.
— Nicole Hemmer, author of Partisans: The Conservative Revolutionaries Who Remade American Politics in the 1990s
Augusta Dell’Omo is a historian of global conservatism and the far right. She received her PhD from the University of Texas at Austin and is currently a senior fellow at the Center for Presidential History at Southern Methodist University.

Introduction
Part I: Building the Pro-Apartheid Movement
1. Telling the Story of White Power
2. The Only True Friends South Africa Has
Part II: An International Antisanctions Campaign
3. Making and Breaking Constructive Engagement
4. White Women for Apartheid
5. Breaking with the Republican Party
Part III: White Power Without Apartheid
Interlude: Apartheid Theology
6. Human Rights for White Power
7. The Colorblind Far Right at Apartheid’s End
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Glossary
Archives
Notes
Index