Stemmet, Jan-Ad2018-01-102018-01-102017Stemmet, J-A. (2017). Reflections on the conduct of the South African Police (SAP) and violent political conflict, ca. 1984-1989. Journal for Contemporary History, 42(2), 143-158.0258-2422 (print)2415-0509 (online)https://dx.doi.org/10.18820/24150509/JCH42.v2.7http://hdl.handle.net/11660/7553During the 1980s, political violence had the best of the South African landscape. While the minority regime struggled to find a political solution, it simultaneously employed its vast security complex to suppress the upheavals. The South African Police, naturally, represented the apartheid-state’s immediate mechanism. The carnage was unprecedented in scope and severity. As such the South African Police, bolstered by draconian security legislation, utilized unprecedented means in quashing opposition. The article aims to address certain aspects of the police’s conduct during this time. It should, however, be taken into account that an in-depth analysis of police conduct during the 1980s cannot be undertaken in a single article.enApartheid South AfricaPolitical violenceSouth African PoliceLouis le GrangeMagnus MalanStates of EmergencyTortureKitskonstabelsThird Force1980sReflections on the conduct of the South African Police (SAP) and violent political conflict, ca. 1984-1989ArticleFaculty of Humanities, University of the Free State