Contents: History of Walvis Bay: pre-mandate • Integration of Walvis Bay 1922-1977 • Legislative integration • Judicial integration • Fiscal integration • The franchise • Immigration • Documentary evidence • Physical evidence • Walvis Bay since Annexation • Notes • The paper discusses international law, legislation applied to the Territory, courts, the British Cape Colony, a German protectorate, the Cape Legislature, South African military occupation, World War I, Proclamations and Martial Law Regulations, Port of Walvis Bay, Administrator of South West Africa, South West Africa Affairs Act, South African Military-Governor of South West, Cape of Good Hope, Union of South...
Contents: History of Walvis Bay: pre-mandate • Integration of Walvis Bay 1922-1977 • Legislative integration • Judicial integration • Fiscal integration • The franchise • Immigration • Documentary evidence • Physical evidence • Walvis Bay since Annexation • Notes • The paper discusses international law, legislation applied to the Territory, courts, the British Cape Colony, a German protectorate, the Cape Legislature, South African military occupation, World War I, Proclamations and Martial Law Regulations, Port of Walvis Bay, Administrator of South West Africa, South West Africa Affairs Act, South African Military-Governor of South West, Cape of Good Hope, Union of South Africa, Union Parliament, Rex v. Offen, South African Customs Tariff and Excise Amendment Act of 1925, the 1922 South West Africa Affairs Act, official Gazette, R. v. Akkermann, the Swakopmund and Lüderitz magisterial districts, High Court of South West Africa, a Court of Admiralty, tax law, South African Finance Minister, South West African Administrator, a territorial Legislative Assembly, white population, elections, the South African gift tax and death duties, South African House of Assembly, the Swakopmund Legislative Assembly, the South African Railways and Harbours Administration, Penguin Islands, 1977 Official Yearbook of the Republic of South Africa, South African Prime Minister, Prime Minister B. J. Vorster, Omaruru constituency, Namakwaland (Namaqualand) electoral district, voters, South African parliamentary elections, Administrator of the Cape Province, State President, group areas, "white property," landlords, Coloureds, imprisonment of Mr. Vaughn Webster in Swakopmund, Green Point, NP (National Party), PFP (Progressive Federal Party), Nama residents, Table Mountain (Tafelberg) electoral division, South African Coloured Persons Representative Council, Mr. L. J. Barnes, DTA (Democratic Turnhalle Alliance), annexation, South West African Broadcasting Corporation (SWABC), South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC), Report of the Commission of Enquiry into South West Africa Affairs 1962-1963, and "Odendaal Plan" or "Odendaal report." [Note: This paper may have been produced for or in relation to the United Nations Council for Namibia Seminar on the 10th Anniversary of The Namibia Opinion at The Peace Palace, The Hague, June 22-24, 1981. However, the author is not on the list of participants.]