Archive of End Loans to Southern Africa

This material is held atBodleian Library, University of Oxford

Scope and Content

The archive has been arranged in the main to reflect the areas in which ELTSA campaigned. Section A contains general minutes, memoranda and publications and the following sections contain the papers of the banking and disinvestment campaigns, Embargo and the oil campaign, the World Gold Commission, general files and the Southern Africa Economic Research Unit, ELTSA's successor.

Administrative / Biographical History

End Loans to Southern Africa (ELTSA) campaigned for the end to apartheid through the imposition of effective financial sanctions. It was established in 1974 by the Reverend David Haslam to campaign initially against loans by Midland Bank, together with other European banks, to the South African government through the European American Banking Corporation. It subsequently broadened its activities to campaign through consumer and shareholder action, parliamentary lobbying and other activities against all foreign, and particularly British, assistance to South Africa and for the implementation of the United Nations General Assembly resolution to end all new investment in and financial loans to South Africa. ELTSA carried out research into British banks and companies, produced information and campaigning documents and pioneered the techniques of pressure group shareholder action. A major element of its banks campaign was the boycott of Barclays Bank. In addition to the banking and disinvestment campaigns ELTSA was involved in the campaign to isolate South African gold through the World Gold Commission and through Embargo it supported the oil embargo of South Africa, with a particular focus during the late 1980s on the boycott of Shell.

In 1994 ELTSA was transformed into the Southern Africa Economic Research Unit (SAERU) to address the economic legacies of apartheid and encourage financial assistance to the region.

Access Information

Bodleian reader's ticket required.

Note

Collection level description created by staff at the Bodleian Library of Commonwealth and African Studies at Rhodes House.

Other Finding Aids

The library holds a card index of all manuscript collections in its reading room.

The full catalogue for this collection is on the library's website: http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/rhodes/.

Conditions Governing Use

No reproduction or publication of personal papers without permission. Contact the library in the first instance.