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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

The influence of ideology upon land policy of the post apartheid government of the Republic of South Africa, 1994 - 2004

Mathiane, Makwena T. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.A. (Political Science))--University of Limpopo, 2007 / Since 1913 black South Africans have been forcefully dispossessed of land under the racist land laws of the successive white South African governments. In 1994 the black government began to pass land laws that were supposed to provide blacks with land ownership rights. Ten years later blacks have re-claimed less than four percent of the eighty seven percent of the land they were dispossessed of. The failure to return dispossessed land to blacks is attributed to the ideology of the current government with respect to its land policy. This study attempts to fill the void regarding the ideological implications of the land reform policy of the post-apartheid government. We speculate that neo-liberal implications are dominant within this policy. Social democracy can overcome the failure of the policy as it is cost-effective and efficient and attempts to achieve social justice. It can therefore afford dispossessed and landless blacks land ownership.
12

Land demand and rural struggles in Xhalanga, Eastern Cape: who wants land and for what?

Ncapayi, Fani January 2005 (has links)
The study explored and investigated demand and struggles for land in the communal areas of South Africa with particular reference to Luphaphasi in the former Xhalanga magisterial district, in the Eastern Cape. The study argued that despite arguments about proletarianisation and conversion of rural land users into wage laborers, leading to assumptions that there was less interest in land use by rural people, there is and has always been demand and struggles for land in communal areas such as Xhalanga.
13

Municipal commonage: an undervalued national resource / Policy brief, number 7, 2012

Gambiza, James, Shackleton, Charlie, Davenport, N, Atkinson, D, Hoffman, M T, Martens, C, Puttick, J, De Groot, W January 2012 (has links)
This policy brief will highlight the importance of municipal commonage in enhancing livelihoods of poor urban families. This will be followed by an overview of the role of municipal commonage in the land reform programme. Current challenges in securing benefits from municipal commonages are then outlined. Policy considerations to optimise benefits from commonages conclude the policy brief.
14

Die invloed van bodembenutting op waterkwaliteit in die Roodeplaatdam

Swanepoel, Willem Morkel 23 August 2012 (has links)
M.Sc. / The goal of this study is to determine the relationship between landuse and runoff water quality. The chosen study area is the Roodeplaat Dam drainage basin. The basin contains three subbasins with varying characteristics. The western subbasin is that of the Hartbees Spruit with a largely urban character. The eastern subbasin containing the Edendal Spruit has mostly rural characteristics in terms of landuse. The central (and largest) sub-basin of the Pienaars River has a mixed (urban/rural) land usage. Specific aims of the study were the determination of the negative (or positive) influence of urban landuse on the quality of water that flows into the Roodeplaat Dam, and the determination of the influence of climate (more specifically precipitation) on this water quality. A review of different water quality components is provided with the emphasis on those used in the study. Each of the three subbasins are described in terms of landese to determine the possible influences on water quality. Water quality data obtained from the Department of Water Affairs (Pretoria) were calculated to fortnightly averages in order to obtain complete time series. Six inorganic water quality indicators (total dissolved solids, pH, magnesium, fluoor, sulphate and calcium carbonate) were chosen out of the initial sixteen obtained. The selection that was made was based on the results of a pre-analysis long term trend analysis (for a five year period) of the water quality indicators in each of the three sub-basins. Chosen data sets were compiled to fortnightly and seasonal averages to be used in the analysis phase. The seasons used were determined by combining precipitation and inflow contributions (to the Roodeplaat Dam) for a ten year period. Each of the six chosen water quality indicators were examined in terms of absolute data (fortnightly averages), seasonal averages and long term trends for the fifteen year study period. Time and spatial aspects were integrated to make the sinthesis of the study possible. Albeit some unique conclusions were made, the initial aims of the study could still be reached. It was determined that urban landuse has a more negative influence on the water quality of the Roodeplaat Dam drainage basin than rural landuse (in this case mostly small holdings). Apart from this it was shown that climate (in the form of precipitation) has an even bigger influence on water quality (pollution concentration levels) in the Roodeplaat Dam drainage basin.
15

The effect of different land uses on household livelihoods in Tale Ga-Morudu Communal Property Association

Ramaloko, Thomas Tshwantshi January 2016 (has links)
This study is about a population of 235 households in Blouberg municipality, Limpopo Province, that constituted itself in 2004 into a Communal Property Association. The Tale Ga-Morudu CPA was formed in order to own, manage and control a total of seventeen farms which were progressively restituted to them during 2004 by the Commission on Restitution of Land Rights. Tale Ga-Morudu households were dispossessed and forcefully removed from a number of fertile, arable and irrigable farms1in the 1960s due to racially discriminatory laws or practices. These households were then relocated by the then apartheid regime on the eastern part of Mogalakwena River. They were distributed in the arid communal areas of Laanglagte/Vergelegen, Matekereng; Ga- Mankgodi; Letswatla and Mamoleka under the traditional leadership of Kgoshi Maleboho of BabinaTšhwene. (Map one). It is the aim of this study to find out how Tale Ga-Morudu CPA currently uses these restituted farms for the households who have said to have benefited from restituted land. The researcher used his own observations, lessons and analysis of perspectives from case studies conducted from Limpopo in order to pursue this aim. This study adopted a descriptive household survey design that used a predominantly quantitative approach, and the use of qualitative methods to complement contextual details. A quantitative questionnaire was used on a sample unit of (20%) 45 households obtained by simple random sampling from a population of 235 households of the CPA. Other qualitative methods include focus group discussion, document review and observation. From the results it is clear that land claimants, prefer to retain existing practices of land use, than risk changes in land use in order to meet their socio-economic needs. Thus, instead of investing in commercial agriculture or wildlife farming, people follow subsistence agriculture and remain dependent on social grants and pensions for their livelihood. The general study findings show that the CPA planned to implement different types of land use including those of direct land use value. These include food gardens, resettlement; game farming; poultry enterprises and livestock grazing, and also of indirect use value. The latter refers to contract crop cultivation, rentals and strategic partnerships. The study found that despite income being generated from indirect types of land use, the majority of these intended beneficiaries never benefited from accrued financial dividends of land rental and development. However, households were still able to take advantage of employment opportunities created by contract crop cultivation and in the process they acquired crop cultivation skills. Furthermore the harvesting of natural resources such as wood and poles also contribute to the wellness of households. Households, also derived cultural wellness and a sense of satisfaction by accessing their restored farms to perform rituals. The general conclusion of the study is that the CPA is underutilizing its properties, including arable and irrigable fields, rentable recreational facilities, game farming and its tourism potential.
16

The decline of agriculture in rural Transkei: ʺthe case of Mission Location in Butterworthʺ

Ngcaba, Siyanda Vincent January 2003 (has links)
The following dissertation sets out to investigate the decline of agriculture in Mission location at Butterworth, Transkei, using the Rehabilitation Scheme as a benchmark. The scheme was introduced in 1945 to combat soil erosion and improve agriculture in the African reserve areas, as the South African government claimed. The dissertation argues that this claim by the government served to mask the real intentions behind the scheme namely, to regiment the migrant labour system by depriving as many Africans as possible of productive land so that they were unable to fully subsist by means of agriculture. This is further shown by analysing the impact of the Rehabilitation scheme in Mission location in which a substantial number of people lost arable land as a result of the implementation of the scheme in 1945. These people were consequently denied the wherewithal to subsist by agriculture. Moreover, the efforts of the government resulted to a modernisation of agriculture by making it more cash-based- for example through the introduction of fencing, the need for tractors as a result of a decline in stock numbers (in part as a result of stock culling). Most people could hardly afford this type of agriculture and were consequently forced off the land. The dissertation concludes that indeed the decline of agriculture in Mission location can be linked to the changing agricultural and land-holding practices brought about by the government- especially the introduction of the Rehabilitation scheme.
17

Demographic change in the Upper Tsitsa Catchment: the integration of census and land cover data for 2001 and 2011

Hodgson, Danuta Lorina January 2018 (has links)
The purpose of this research was to determine if the integration of census and land cover data could provide evidence of spatial patterns and temporal change for the Upper Tsitsa Catchment. This thesis contributed to academic literature with regards to dasymetric mapping and provided a database for the Ntabelanga and Laleni Ecological Infrastructure Project. The study took place in the Upper Tsitsa Catchment which is located in the north-eastern region of the Eastern Cape and falls within the uMzimvubu Catchment. South Africa National Population Censuses for 2001 and 2011 and the National Land Cover data sets for 2000 and 2013/14 were used to create dasymetric maps depicting demographic changes over time for the catchment area. Spatial statistics were performed on the dasymetric and choropleth map to determine the accuracy of the data that was created. From the results, it was found that although the statistics were skewed, the method was more accurate in displaying the population densities, which was noted during the sampling process of the spatial analysis. It was found that there had been a decrease in the population density within the catchment. This affected the density of several other variables such as population race group, language and employment status statistics as decreases in these values could be due to individuals migrating out of the catchment as well as socio-economic upliftment, such as having better access to services. The use of dasymetric mapping allowed an accurate representation of the population density from the census data to be created. The results of the dasymetric mapping were more accurate as they depicted where the population within the enumeration areas were located, and recognised that some areas were populated while some areas were not. To conclude, it was found that using dasymetric mapping provided reliable and useful data about population density and enables comparison over time.
18

Bodembenuttingskartering van Sandton se landelik-stedelike soomgebied met behulp van satellietdata

Hirvela, Caroline 25 September 2014 (has links)
M.Sc. (Geography) / Landsat TM and SPOTMSS data were analysed and classified using two different procedures and the resulting maps were evaluated with respect to land use in the Sandton urban-rural fringe. The Landsat TM data consisted of 6 spectral bands (0,45-0,52, 0,52-0,60, 0,63-0,69, 0,760,90, 1,55-1,75, 2,08-2,35 IJm). The SPOT MSS data (one image taken in summer and one in winter) consisted of 3 spectral bands (0,50-0,59, 0,61-0,68, 0,79-0,89 IJm). The data from the two systems were stretched statistically so that all bands showed similar spread on both sides of the median. A ground truth map was obtained from the Sandton Town Council against which the final land use maps derived from Landsat and SPOT were compared for accuracy. The satellite data were analysed in two steps to compile the land use maps: The first step was a cluster analysis based on ISODATA of Ball and Hall (Ball, m..al, 1965). The result were 3 maps with 34, 30 and 35 spectral classes for Landsat TM and the SPOT seasonal images. The next step was a combination of cluster analysis and nearest-neighbour analysis. Examples of the land uses required for the final maps were chosen and for each a histogram of spectral classes was compiled. A nearest-neighbour analysis was done to determine how many pixels of the same class lie next to each other. All the pixels in the spectrally classified image were viewed in conjunction with the surrounding pixels; a histogram and nearest-neighbour analysis was done for each. The results were then compared to that of the land use examples and each pixel was allocated to the land use class which it most resembled. The evaluation involved a computerised comparison of the land use maps with the ground truth map obtained from the Sandton Town Council. The final results were three different land use maps, each created with one image (Landsat TM, SPOTsummer, or winter images). The land use classes identified on each map were: agricultural holdings; high density residential areas; low density residential areas; townhouses (only from the SPOTimages); a combination of commercial and industrial areas; parks; unused land; recreational areas. Comparative use of the two satellite based data acquisition systems leads the author to conclude that: Landsat TM was best for mapping agricultural holdings and high density residential areas; the SPOT summer image was best for mapping townhouses, parks, unused land and recreational areas, the SPOT winter image was best for mapping low density residential areas and commercial/industrial areas. Both systems may be regarded as data sources for urban research, for the mapping of land use in urban-rural fringes. The result of this study is the provision of an easily updated land use map of the Sandton urban-rural fringe to aid effective planning and control where future development will take place.
19

Reviewing farm worker equity schemes: a case study of Saamwerk wine farm in the Overberg region, Western Cape

Tom, Boyce January 2006 (has links)
Magister Philosophiae (Land and Agrarian Studies) - MPhil(LAS) / This research investigated experiences of the Saamwerk equity scheme as a framework to analyze the ways in which the scheme has achieved the objectives of land reform. It reviewed the role of this scheme in relation to the experiences and perceptions of beneficiaries about the extent to which this scheme has or has not improved their living conditions. / South Africa
20

Government policies aimed at combating land degradation in Alfred Nzo District

Nqaphi, David Zibekile January 2016 (has links)
Land degradation is a serious problem in communal district of Alfred Nzo, Eastern Cape in South Africa. The root causes of land degradation and soil erosion differ. The causes of land degradation in Alfred Nzo district communal areas are due to soil erosion by wind, water and poor agricultural practices. Rainfall is one of the most important climatic factor that contributed a lot in land degradation in the Alfred Nzo District. Other main factors contributing to land degradation include: Socio-economic factors related to historical land policies and inappropriate land uses, Poor land use planning, Drought and rainfall variability .Land use and management and sand mining. This study tried to pay more focus on the assessment of government policies which aimed at combating land degradation in South Africa in their nature but the area of focus will be Ntabankulu Local Municipality area in the project called Ematolweni Agricultural Co-operative Project. The reason to focus in this project is because they are currently practising crop production under electrified irrigation system but the main obstacle in this project are the dongas which are seemed to be a serious threat to the project site. During rainy seasons the project site is not easily accessible, that hampers access to market. There is also direct and serious effect of land degradation which is food insecurity which is emanating from loss of biodiversity and ground cover, loss of soil productivity, loss of income, decreased yield, and decline in economic productivity and national development. Lastly it is wisely recommended that to reduce the effect of land degradation in Alfred Nzo enlarge, government should strengthen the intervention programmes and provide more support to the LandCare programme which was the concept introduced in Australian and adopted in South Africa in 2001. This programme is assisting at restoring sustainability and productivity to land and water management in both rural and urban areas. It is holistic in nature, encompassing integrated sustainable natural resource management.

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