Land (and settlement) reform post-expropriation: Shifting the focus to the ‘Sustainable Human Settlement Development’ imperative

Land reform in South Africa has paid less attention to the creation of fair and viable postapartheid urban human settlements than it has to rural land reform. While expropriation of land with or without compensation will deliver land, the question as to what happens post-expropriation has not been a...

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Main Authors: Mark Oranje, Jeannie van Wyk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Free State 2019-12-01
Series:Town and Regional Planning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/trp/article/view/4157
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spelling doaj-a4a92128658a43cc96c1330d4c72b9cf2021-05-27T14:27:18ZengUniversity of the Free StateTown and Regional Planning1012-280X2415-04952019-12-01750112124http://dx.doi.org/10.18820/2415-0495/trp75i1.12Land (and settlement) reform post-expropriation: Shifting the focus to the ‘Sustainable Human Settlement Development’ imperativeMark Oranje 0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4844-4025Jeannie van Wyk 1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8706-6605University of Pretoria, South AfricaUniversity of Pretoria, South AfricaLand reform in South Africa has paid less attention to the creation of fair and viable postapartheid urban human settlements than it has to rural land reform. While expropriation of land with or without compensation will deliver land, the question as to what happens post-expropriation has not been addressed. A reconsideration and redesign of the South African legal, policy and institutional frameworks, and spatial planning instruments are required, in order to enable the process of urban land reform to deliver on the development of sustainable human settlements. Since a number of countries have successfully dealt with large-scale restructuring and redevelopment, an examination of the methods employed in two countries, namely Rwanda, post-the genocide in 1994, and The Netherlands, post-World War II, is undertaken to facilitate that process.https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/trp/article/view/4157land reformnational reconstructionsettlement developmentsouth africarwandathe netherlands
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Oranje
Jeannie van Wyk
spellingShingle Mark Oranje
Jeannie van Wyk
Land (and settlement) reform post-expropriation: Shifting the focus to the ‘Sustainable Human Settlement Development’ imperative
Town and Regional Planning
land reform
national reconstruction
settlement development
south africa
rwanda
the netherlands
author_facet Mark Oranje
Jeannie van Wyk
author_sort Mark Oranje
title Land (and settlement) reform post-expropriation: Shifting the focus to the ‘Sustainable Human Settlement Development’ imperative
title_short Land (and settlement) reform post-expropriation: Shifting the focus to the ‘Sustainable Human Settlement Development’ imperative
title_full Land (and settlement) reform post-expropriation: Shifting the focus to the ‘Sustainable Human Settlement Development’ imperative
title_fullStr Land (and settlement) reform post-expropriation: Shifting the focus to the ‘Sustainable Human Settlement Development’ imperative
title_full_unstemmed Land (and settlement) reform post-expropriation: Shifting the focus to the ‘Sustainable Human Settlement Development’ imperative
title_sort land (and settlement) reform post-expropriation: shifting the focus to the ‘sustainable human settlement development’ imperative
publisher University of the Free State
series Town and Regional Planning
issn 1012-280X
2415-0495
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Land reform in South Africa has paid less attention to the creation of fair and viable postapartheid urban human settlements than it has to rural land reform. While expropriation of land with or without compensation will deliver land, the question as to what happens post-expropriation has not been addressed. A reconsideration and redesign of the South African legal, policy and institutional frameworks, and spatial planning instruments are required, in order to enable the process of urban land reform to deliver on the development of sustainable human settlements. Since a number of countries have successfully dealt with large-scale restructuring and redevelopment, an examination of the methods employed in two countries, namely Rwanda, post-the genocide in 1994, and The Netherlands, post-World War II, is undertaken to facilitate that process.
topic land reform
national reconstruction
settlement development
south africa
rwanda
the netherlands
url https://journals.ufs.ac.za/index.php/trp/article/view/4157
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AT jeannievanwyk landandsettlementreformpostexpropriationshiftingthefocustothesustainablehumansettlementdevelopmentimperative
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