Contents
Part IThe Rights and Wrongs of South African Property Law
1Politics or Principle? Making Sense of the Expropriation Without Compensation Debate
2The Legal and Philosophical Dichotomy between Land and Property: A Transformative Justice Approach to the Rights and Wrongs of South African Property Law
4The Tale of Two Women: Is the Transformative Thrust Embodied in the Property Clause a Theory or a Lived Reality Where Land Reform Is Concerned?
5‘Setting Our Transformation Sights Too Low’: Land Reform, ‘Expropriation Without Compensation’ and ‘State Custodianship of Land’
Part IIPotentials and Pitfalls of South African Land Reform
6The Constitution’s Mandate for Transformation: From ‘Expropriation Without Compensation’ to ‘Equitable Access to Land’
7Land Reform Opportunities Meet Democratic Challenges in Traditional Areas: Gendered Lessons from Vernacular Law and IPILRA
9Land Reform and Beyond in Times of Social–Ecological Change: Perspectives from the Karoo
Part IIIImagining Alternative Futures of Redistributive Justice in South Africa