Protection of the procedural rights of indigenous people affected by mining in South Africa / Modise William Shakung

This dissertation analyses whether the rights of indigenous people are being recognised, respected and upheld when the state awards prospecting and mining rights on land owned and lawfully occupied by indigenous people in South Africa. This analysis is based on the fact that most prospecting and min...

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Main Author: Shakung, Modise William
Language:en
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10394/12200
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-nwu-oai-dspace.nwu.ac.za-10394-122002016-03-16T03:59:06ZProtection of the procedural rights of indigenous people affected by mining in South Africa / Modise William ShakungShakung, Modise WilliamIndigenous peopleConstitutional procedural rightsConsultationMining operationslnheemse groepeGrondwetlike prosedurele regteKonsultasieMynbouaktiwiteiteThis dissertation analyses whether the rights of indigenous people are being recognised, respected and upheld when the state awards prospecting and mining rights on land owned and lawfully occupied by indigenous people in South Africa. This analysis is based on the fact that most prospecting and mining rights in South Africa are awarded on or around communal lands where rural communities and, in some instances, indigenous people reside. Through the Constitution, the NEMA, the MPRDA and other environmental sector-specific legislation examples, it is established that the state tends to prioritise economic development that alienates indigenous peoples' right to live in a healthy and safe environment as a result of the on-going mining operations. A sustainable approach which appreciates the balance between economic, social and environmental sustainability is proposed as a means and step towards realisation of South Africa's mineral wealth, the right of communities to live in a healthy environment and community, as well as prior consultation when prospecting and mining rights are awarded on communal lands. The approach of the Bengwenyama-ye-Maswati Constitutional Court decision pertaining to the rights of local communities and indigenous people when mining takes place in South Africa is adopted to link the three sustainability pillars to the realisation of the rights of these local communities.LLM (Environmental Law and Governance), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 20142014-11-06T06:54:12Z2014-11-06T06:54:12Z2014Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10394/12200en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Indigenous people
Constitutional procedural rights
Consultation
Mining operations
lnheemse groepe
Grondwetlike prosedurele regte
Konsultasie
Mynbouaktiwiteite
spellingShingle Indigenous people
Constitutional procedural rights
Consultation
Mining operations
lnheemse groepe
Grondwetlike prosedurele regte
Konsultasie
Mynbouaktiwiteite
Shakung, Modise William
Protection of the procedural rights of indigenous people affected by mining in South Africa / Modise William Shakung
description This dissertation analyses whether the rights of indigenous people are being recognised, respected and upheld when the state awards prospecting and mining rights on land owned and lawfully occupied by indigenous people in South Africa. This analysis is based on the fact that most prospecting and mining rights in South Africa are awarded on or around communal lands where rural communities and, in some instances, indigenous people reside. Through the Constitution, the NEMA, the MPRDA and other environmental sector-specific legislation examples, it is established that the state tends to prioritise economic development that alienates indigenous peoples' right to live in a healthy and safe environment as a result of the on-going mining operations. A sustainable approach which appreciates the balance between economic, social and environmental sustainability is proposed as a means and step towards realisation of South Africa's mineral wealth, the right of communities to live in a healthy environment and community, as well as prior consultation when prospecting and mining rights are awarded on communal lands. The approach of the Bengwenyama-ye-Maswati Constitutional Court decision pertaining to the rights of local communities and indigenous people when mining takes place in South Africa is adopted to link the three sustainability pillars to the realisation of the rights of these local communities. === LLM (Environmental Law and Governance), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2014
author Shakung, Modise William
author_facet Shakung, Modise William
author_sort Shakung, Modise William
title Protection of the procedural rights of indigenous people affected by mining in South Africa / Modise William Shakung
title_short Protection of the procedural rights of indigenous people affected by mining in South Africa / Modise William Shakung
title_full Protection of the procedural rights of indigenous people affected by mining in South Africa / Modise William Shakung
title_fullStr Protection of the procedural rights of indigenous people affected by mining in South Africa / Modise William Shakung
title_full_unstemmed Protection of the procedural rights of indigenous people affected by mining in South Africa / Modise William Shakung
title_sort protection of the procedural rights of indigenous people affected by mining in south africa / modise william shakung
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10394/12200
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