AdamsG.DoblesI.GómezL. H.KurtişT.MolinaL. E. (2015). Decolonizing psychological science: Introduction to the special thematic section. Journal of Social and Political Psychology, 3(1), 213–238.
2.
AscionG. (2016). Science and the decolonization of social theory: Unthinking modernity. London, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.
3.
CooperS. (2014). South African psychology 20 years into democracy. South African Journal of Psychology, 44, 261–266.
4.
CornishF.HaakenJ.MoskovitzL.JacksonS. (2016). Rethinking prefigurative politics: Introduction to the special thematic section. Journal of Social and Political Psychology, 4(1): 114–127.
5.
de la ReyC.IpserJ. (2004). The call for relevance: South African psychology ten years into democracy. South African Journal of Psychology, 34, 544–552.
6.
FanonF. (1963). The wretched of the earth. New York: Grove Weidenfeld.
7.
HayesG. (2003). PINS: 20 years of oppositional and critical psychology. Psychology in Society, 29, 1–5.
8.
HayesG.HookD. (2016). Editorial: Sobukwe, psychology, and politics. Psychology in Society, 50, 1–6.
KessiS.KiguwaP. (2015). Social psychology and social change: Beyond western perspectives. Papers on Social Representations, 24, 1.1–1.11.
13.
LongW. (2013). “Market relevance,” “social relevance,” and psychology in South Africa. South African Journal of Psychology, 43, 434–444.
14.
LongW. (2014). SAPA, science and society: A debacle revisited. Psychology in Society, 47, 41–58.
15.
LongW. (2016a). On the Africanisation of psychology. South African Journal of Psychology, 46, 429–431.
16.
LongW. (2016b). A history of “relevance” in psychology. Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan.
17.
MalherbeN.HelmanR.CornellJ. (2016). Creative undisciplining: Report on the 6th international conference on community psychology, Durban, South Africa, 27–30 May 2016. Psychology in Society, 51, 95–98.
18.
MacleodC. (2004). South African psychology and ‘relevance’: Continuing challenges. South African Journal of Psychology, 34, 613–629.
19.
NicholasL. J.CooperS. (Eds.). (1993). Psychology and apartheid. Johannesburg, South Africa: Vision Publications.
20.
PainterD. (2014). For a permanent critique of psychology: Reimagining psychology in society. Psychology in Society, 46, 41–45.
21.
PainterD.KiguwaP.BöhmkeW. (2013). Contexts, continuities and conundrums: Reflections on the current state of critical psychology in South Africa. Annual Review of Critical Psychology, 13, 849–869.
22.
PickrenW. E.RutherfordA. (2010). A history of modern psychology in context. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons.
23.
PillayA. L.AhmedR.BawaU. (2013). Clinical psychology training in South Africa: A call to action. South African Journal of Psychology, 43, 46–58.
24.
PillayS. R. (2016). Silence is violence: (Critical) psychology in an era of Rhodes Must Fall and Fees Must Fall. South African Journal of Psychology, 46, 155–159.
25.
RateleK. (2014, September21). Why I am against “transformation.”Sunday Tribune, p. 30.
StrümpferD.J.W. (1981). Towards a more socially responsive psychology. South African Journal of Psychology, 11, 18–28.
28.
SufflaS.SeedatM. (2004). How has psychology fared over ten years of democracy? Achievements, challenges and questions. South African Journal of Psychology, 34, 513–519.