Change, organisational culture and the development of the South African Military Academy to 2009.
Abstract
This article investigates the impact of change and organisational culture on the growth
and development of the South African Military Academy. It explores the impact of
Nationalist Party rule since 1948 and black majority rule since 1994 on the institutional
culture of the South African military and how that influenced the development of the
Military Academy. This is intertwined with an investigation of the nature and impact of
the diverging military and academic subcultures at the Academy. The article contends
that, together with the historical exclusion of blacks and women from the military, the
marginalisation of white English-speaking citizens by Nationalist Party rule denied the
Academy the exploitation of a significant portion of the country’s human resource
potential in the interest of institutional development. The same happened with the
introduction of racial quotas and the marginalisation of whites since 1994. The Military
Academy has, furthermore, historically been too reflective of the organisational culture of
the South African National Defence Force and its predecessors instead of informing that
culture to meet the challenges of military professionalism. The Academy has a
potentially vital educational role to play in the South African and Sub-Saharan African
militaries, but requires some changes in its organisational culture to fulfil that mission.