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Land Reform in South Africa: An Overview
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2019
Extract
South Africa suffered a long history of colonization, racial domination and land dispossession that resulted in the bulk of the agricultural land being owned by a white minority. Black people resisted being dispossessed but were defeated by the superior arms of the newcomers. As Lewin has written, “whatever minor causes there may have been for the many Bantu-European wars, the desire for land was the fundamental cause.” Despite the claims that South Africa was largely uninhabited at the time of the arrival of Europeans, documentary evidence shows that in fact the land was inhabited. Thus the journal of the first European to settle at the Cape, Jan van Riebeeck records incidents of confrontation with the indigenous Khoi-khoi (or Hottentots) in 1655.
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References
1 Lewin, J. The Native in South Africa, Witwatersrand University Press, Johannesburg. Quoted in Letsoalo, “Land ‘Reforms’ – State initiatives” in de Klerk, Michael, ed: A Harvest of Discontent: The Land Question in South Africa, 1944. 99-111 at 100.Google Scholar
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71 Land Affairs Budget vote 2003/2004: speech by Minister Thoko Didiza on 01/04/2003. Available at http://landpwv.gov.za, accessed on 05/08/2003.Google Scholar
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73 Ibid. Box 4.4.Google Scholar
74 Information from a law student whose family was involved in such a scheme in the Western Cape.Google Scholar
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83 There have been several drafts of the bill. The current version is the Communal Land Rights Bill 2003’ which has been before Parliament since late 2003.Google Scholar
84 In Ngcobo v Salimba, Ngcobo v Van Rensburg [1999] 2 All SA 491 (A) it was held that all the three requirements must be met before a person can be classified as a labor tenant.Google Scholar
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87 The Land Affairs General Amendment Act 51 of 2001 amended ESTA by deleting the exclusion of labor tenants from the definition of occupier.Google Scholar
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