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Biodiversity conservation and land rights in South Africa : whither the farm dwellers?Crane, Wendy 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil (Public Management and Planning))--University of Stellenbosch, 2006. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: South Africa is unique in that its globally significant biodiversity, which is under major threat,
coexists with an apartheid history of dispossession that produced a starkly unequal land
ownership pattern and widespread rural poverty. It is in this context that the post-apartheid
government must fulfil constitutional and international obligations to safeguard environmental
assets as well as undertake land reform benefiting the previously dispossessed. Consequently,
there is a continuous challenge of reconciling complex and often conflicting relationships
between poverty, inequitable access to resources, and the protection of biodiversity. Current
efforts to conserve the Cape Floral Kingdom emphasise partnerships between private
landowners and existing nature reserves to promote sustainable utilisation of biodiversity. This
paper explores the potential impact of this approach on farm dwellers, and how changing land
use may affect their land tenure rights and livelihoods. Primary research was undertaken in the
Baviaanskloof, where this model is in an early stage of implementation. The paper identifies
systemic and structural tensions in current attempts to reconcile biodiversity conservation and
farm dwellers’ interests, and documents issues of process and principle that could become
important in the future. In doing so, it highlights the influence of on-farm power relations and
highly complex institutional arrangements in determining the real extent of participation by
affected farm dwellers and the efficacy of social safeguard policies. Findings also caution
against an over-reliance on ecotourism as the major occupation and argues instead for support
to multiple livelihood strategies.
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An evaluation of a public-private partnership as an alternative delivery mechanism to enable the effective redistribution of land in KwaZulu-Natal : the case of Inkezo Land CompanyMadhanpall, Anwhar 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPA (School of Public Management and Planning))--University of Stellenbosch, 2008. / The dawn of a democratic South Africa in 1994 was seen as the beginning of a new era in South Africa.
Land Reform, as a matter of moral reconciliation, and within the context of rural development, was high on the agenda to be addressed by the new democratic ANC-led government.
Although South Africa’s history of systematic racial land dispossession is not unique; the extent of the dispossession, and racial nature of the dispossession gave a uniqueness to South Africa’s land history. In 1994 the racially skewed land ownership pattern reflected that 55 000 white commercial farmers owned 87 per cent of the land, yet the African majority of had access to 13 per cent of the marginal land.
The land reform imperative was restricted in approach by the compromise reached during the negotiations resulting in a transitional government for South Africa. In addition, the early 1990’s, was a period of increasing dominance of the neo-liberal ideology with its minimal state and minimal state intervention, and reliance on the free market principles informing interventions and programmes.
The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa enshrined private property rights protection; and whilst given recognition to the requirement of land reform it enshrined a market-led approach with enabling legislation and policy statements such as a “willing-buyer/willing-seller” requirements for redistribution and market related prices for land acquisition.
The Department of Land Affairs, a national government department, was tasked with the development and implementation of land redistribution. Therefore, despite the neo-liberal principles informing land reform, a state-led approach towards the actual implementation was embarked upon. In 1998 a target was set to be achieved within 5 years; which the Department failed dismally to reach. The target was then extended to be reached by 2014, and the thesis predicts that unless the delivery mechanism currently utilised for land redistribution is changed the target will not be reached by 2014.
The New Public Management paradigm, and various alternative delivery mechanisms have been considered, in addition to assessing the delivery mechanisms and approaches towards land reform in Brazil and the Philippines in an attempt to identify suitable delivery mechanisms for land reform in South Africa to enable it to achieve its target and objectives.
A detailed evaluation of an existing Public-Private Partnership, which exists to implement land redistribution was undertaken in terms of primary data collection and secondary data statistics. The evaluation assessed whether this delivery mechanism will enable targets to be met and land redistribution objectives in relation to rural development be achieved.
The thesis argues that the Public-Private Partnerships alternative delivery mechanism is a suitable vehicle to delivery land redistribution across agriculture commodities, with key recommendations on matters to address within the PPP mechanism.
For land reform to be implemented at the required scale and to achieve its developmental objectives innovation is required within partnership approaches and not a traditional bureaucratic-led approach.
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The development of a methodology to evaluate business plans for land reform projects in the Western Cape with special emphasis on LRAD grant supported projectsLombard, Christoffel 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MDF)--University of Stellenbosch, 2011. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT:
The main purpose of this study was to develop a methodology to evaluate business plans which
support governmental grants to emerging farmers in the Winelands area of the Western Cape.
The study focuses primarily on two types of emerging farmer groups namely (i) farm equity groups
and (ii) individual farmers (less than 10 members per farm). Empowering disadvantaged people is
exceedingly complex, therefore it is of paramount importance to compile a detailed and
comprehensive business plan based on a proper feasibility study. If a project is not feasible on
paper it will rarely succeed in practice.
Four LRAD business plans per group were evaluated and have been scored against a contents
list, which was compiled from an ideal farm business plan. This was followed up with a
questionnaire to evaluate the current situation on the farms and to test the understanding of the
business plan and its elements with the beneficiaries.
There is a clear distinction in the quality of business plans between the equity scheme land reform
models and individual farmer’s business plans. The quality of the equity farmer’s business plan
was in most cases around 25 percent better compared to those of the individual farmers. The
result of the study shows that there is a direct link between the quality of the business plan and the
sustainability of the projects. Lower scored individual farmer projects under review, struggle to
stay afloat with a weak cash flow as their main drawback. On the other hand the better scored
equity scheme projects are much more sustainable; however more focus needs to be placed on
developing the shareholders in the understanding of the financial side and land ownership
principals.
The author is of the opinion that only feasible projects must receive grant funding and this should
be supported by good mentorship policies from government. South Africa can no longer afford
“social business plans” in the land reform process; there is a need for sound farm business plans
as a very important first step to feasible and sustainable farming ventures. The methodology
developed in this study could become a valuable tool for government departments for directly
measuring the quality of business plans and thereby indirectly the feasibility of land reform
projects. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING:
Die hoofdoel van hierdie studie was om 'n metodiek te ontwikkel waarmee plaas besigheidsplanne
geёalueer kan word vir die aansoek van skenkings (“grant”) fondse vir opkomende boere in die
Kaapse Wynlandarea. Die studie fokus hoofsaaklik op twee tipes groepe, naamlik (i) plaas
aandele skema groepe en (ii) individuele boere (minder as 10 lede per plaas). Die bemagtiging van
opkomende boere is baie kompleks, daarom is dit baie belangrik om 'n gedetailleerde en
omvattende besigheidsplan, gegrond op' n behoorlike ondersoek na die haalbaarheid, daar te stel.
As 'n projek op papier nie haalbaar is nie, gaan dit nie sommer suksesvol wees in die praktyk nie.
Vier LRAD besigheidsplanne per groep is geëvalueer teen 'n inhoudslys wat vanaf ‘n ideale plaas
besigheidsplan saamgestel is. Dit is opgevolg met 'n vraelys om die huidige situasie op die plase
te evalueer en die begrip van die besigheidsplan en sy elemente te toets.
‘n Duidelike kwaliteits verskil kan gesien word tussen die aandeel skema boere -en individuele
boere se besigheidsplanne. Die gehalte van die aandeel skema boere se planne was in die
meeste gevalle ongeveer 25 persent beter as dié van die individuele boere. Die studie kan 'n
direkte lyn trek tussen die besigheidsplan inligting en die volhoubaarheid van die projekte. Die
individuele boere- projekte onder oorsig sukkel om kop bo water te hou met 'n swak kontantvloei
as hulle belangrikste nadeel. Aan die ander kant, is die aandeleskema projekte baie meer
volhoubaar, maar meer fokus moet geplaas word op die ontwikkeling van die aandeelhouers se
begrip van die finansiële kant van die boerdery asook eienaarskap op die plaas.
Die tyd het aangebreek dat slegs haalbare projekte befonds moet word en dat die regering hierdie
projekte moet ondersteun met goeie mentorskap beleid. Daar is nie meer plek vir "sosiale
besigheids planne" in die Suid-Afrikaanse grondhervormingsproses nie. Goeie werkbare plaas
besigheidsplanne is nodig as 'n baie belangrike eerste stap om volhoubare boerdery
ondernemings daar te stel. Hierdie studie is 'n waardevolle hulpmiddel in die regering se hand vir
die evaluering van besigheidsplanne van grondhervormings projekte.
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The role and functions of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act (PIE) in land reform in South Africa.Oliphant, Laetitia January 2004 (has links)
This thesis set out to determine the degree to which the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act is in line with the objectives of South Africa's land reform policy with regard to the promotion of access to land and security of tenure, and to determine to which extent the Act has contributed to land reform. South Africa's history of denial of land rights by dispossession and forced removals made the regulation of evictions imperative. Before this, black people had no recource when they were forced off land that they occupied, or even owned, for decades. The purpose of the Act is " / to provide for the prohibition of unlawful eviction / to provide for procedures for the eviction of unlawful occuiers / and to repeal the Prevention of Illegal Squatting Act 52 of 1951" / .
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The role of education in land restitution, redistribution and restrictions as individual, group and national empowerment through land reformYeni, Clementine Sibongile January 2013 (has links)
Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Technology: Education, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2013. / This study is focused on the role of education to improve awareness of two critically important aspects of the South African situation 19 years after the first democratic elections in 1994. In the first instance, the study aims to augment the grades 10-12 Life Orientation curriculum to promote understanding and appreciation of land rights as human rights for every citizen in South Africa to address the social injustices of the past. In the second instance, the study focuses on grades 10-12 Agricultural Sciences curriculum to ensure that every learner who leaves school is in a position to care for land responsibly, and to use land productively for his or her own benefit and the benefit of others in the future.
These foci have been informed by numerous interactions with people in four small communities on the Southern KwaZulu-Natal coast, who have been victims of landless as a result of the Group Areas act of 1960, and are claiming restitution for the land lost, and are required by law to make the restituted land productive.
The study records first hand stories told about land ownership, landless, land claims, land restitution, and land (ab)use stories, in the form of narratives, such as autobiographies, auto-ethnographies, accounts of action research and self study. My research participants and I are the authors of our land stories. We tell our stories as a way of making the private public in the interests of a fair and just society.
The forms of presentation include narratives, dialogues, playlets, literary references and critical reflections. The perspectives used include the native worldview, rurality as a dynamic, generative and variable milieu, the orality-literacy interface, the effect of oppression, and values and beliefs, customs and mores which (in)form a civil and civilised society.
During the course of the study, the role of stories to reveal what is happening in the lives of those people most affected by unjust laws, and to empower them to take action in their own best interests became evident.
The major role of education in land reforms cannot be overemphasized, which is why I have used what I have discovered from the many interactions with many people to inform two grades 10-12 school curricula: the grades 10-12 Life Orientation curriculum and the grades 10-12 Agricultural Sciences curriculum . / PDF Full-text unavailable. Please refer to hard copy for Full-text / D
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An investigation into the impact of Land Reform on women empowerment with reference to Masakona Land Restitution Project at Makhado Municipality, Limpopo ProvinceSikhipha, Namadzavho Margaret January 2012 (has links)
Thesis (M.Dev.) -- University of Limpopo, 2012 / The research study focus on an investigation into the impact of land reform on women empowerment with reference to Masakona land restitution project at Makhado municipality, Limpopo province. South Africa land reform programme has three sub- programmes namely, Land Restitution, Land Redistribution and Land Tenure. The promotion of women economic empowerment in land restitution projects facilitates the achievement of other important public policy goals such as economic growth, improved human development and reduces poverty.
A specific focus on women in land restitution is necessary given the reality that women comprise the majority of economically disadvantaged groups. The support for women economic empowerment as part of overall development programming is important. There should be enough capacity building targeted at women to help them increase their participation in land reform programmes and projects. Land will serve as a means of creating opportunities to enable women to develop in numerous sphere of life, therefore giving them independent economic status.
The research findings in this study were done to employed females beneficiaries and the management of Masakona land restitution farms. The measurement of women empowerment were established focusing on economic empowerment, poverty alleviation, participation, decision making and capacity building at Masakona land restitution farms.
The findings of this study require the land reform programme to recognize the benefits received by women when lands are transferred to their household and community.
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Land, power and justice in South Africa in dialogue with the biblical story of Naboth's vineyard.Marie, Rowanne Sarojini. January 2004 (has links)
The land issue is one among the many challenges faced by South Africa. In this work I
look at dispossession of land in the South African context, and reflect on the biblical
account of Naboth's vineyard. Naboth was dispossessed of his vineyard through the
abuse of power and the lack of justice.
In like manner, people of colour in South Africa were dispossessed of their land by a very
powerful minority. The legal system did not protect the weak and vulnerable - hence
many injustices occurred.
The aim of this dissertation is to remind ourselves of land dispossession through the
abuse of power and the lack of justice. Through this reminder, I encourage and challenge
the church of its responsibilities in the land discussion. The church has a biblical
mandate to speak out prophetically and to become proactive in correcting the injustices of
the past.
Through the church responding in this manner, it will directly assist in poverty alleviation
and will drive toward an improved quality of life for all human beings. / Thesis (M.Th.)-University of KwaZulu- Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2004.
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Assessing the feasibility of land reform farm equity schemes : a focus on capacity building and empowermentPhayane, Gwendoline Mosela. January 2006 (has links)
This research was undertaken to determine the extent to which share equity schemes have been successful. The research also investigated the possible causes of failure of the established share equity projects and sought to determine the feasibility requirements that may be put in place to ensure success and sustainability of the ventures in support of land reform. The methodology used involved comparing the data gathered from business plans, valuation reports and other project documents from the Department of Land Affairs (DLA) with the information gathered through interviews and observations. The results revealed causes of failure to include the fact that beneficiaries of the investigated equity schemes did not participate in business plan development or implementation and therefore had no sense of ownership in the intended joint ventures. It was also found that none of the business plans included any form of training for capacity building and therefore no mechanism for empowering beneficiaries existed to participate effectively at all levels of the farming enterprise. Furthermore, original farm owners as the majority shareholders tended to re-invest profits into farm assets rather than paying dividends. It was concluded that the inclusion of a training programme in every business plan is crucial to the success of farm share equity ventures as this may enable beneficiaries to be sufficiently empowered to participate effectively at all levels of the business. / Thesis (M.Env.Dev.) - University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2006.
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Analysis and mapping of basic communal land administration systems using participatory GPS and GIS : a case study of Makurung Village.Maleka, Mampone Morris. January 2006 (has links)
Participatory GPS and GIS mapping is a mapping process that involves active participation of the local communities with the assistance of outsiders who are experts in the field. The objective of Participatory GPS and GIS mapping is to produce a technically accurate and socially acceptable participatory map and to facilitate skills transfer to the participant community.
A basic communal land administration system is a land administration structure responsible for the administration of a local, elementary area of jurisdiction (a village) occupied by a tribe whose rights to land are derived from shared rules
determining access and is normally led by an Induna. The analysis of such a structure could provide a foundation for the implementation of Communal Land Rights Act, 2004 (Act No 11 of 2004) that is, the transfer of communal lands to communities.
A sub-metre accuracy is obtainable after post-processing differential correction as acclaimed by Trimble on the Geo-XT™ GPS unit and proven in the Ukulinga case study. Participatory GPS and GIS mapping guarantees effective and efficient skills
transfer to participant communities and accurate recording of boundary data. Maps produced through Participatory GPS and GIS mapping are widely acceptable since they are preceded by discussions and subsequent consensus on boundary data points prior to actual recording, thereof. The study was designed to analyze basic communal land administration systems and to develop a methodology for mapping them. A successful implementation of the Communal Land Rights Act, 2004 required spatial and related information on land administration structures A Participatory mapping methodology designed was tested in two case studies and found to be reasonably accurate. / Thesis (M.Env.Dev.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2006.
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The role and functions of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act (PIE) in land reform in South Africa.Oliphant, Laetitia January 2004 (has links)
This thesis set out to determine the degree to which the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act is in line with the objectives of South Africa's land reform policy with regard to the promotion of access to land and security of tenure, and to determine to which extent the Act has contributed to land reform. South Africa's history of denial of land rights by dispossession and forced removals made the regulation of evictions imperative. Before this, black people had no recource when they were forced off land that they occupied, or even owned, for decades. The purpose of the Act is " / to provide for the prohibition of unlawful eviction / to provide for procedures for the eviction of unlawful occuiers / and to repeal the Prevention of Illegal Squatting Act 52 of 1951" / .
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