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Fighting Fire with a Broken Teacup : A Comparative Analysis of South Africa's Land-Redistribution Program
Author
Moseley, W G
McCusker, B
Publisher
Geographical Review
Publication Year
2008
Body

Since the rise of its first democratically elected government in 1994, South Africa has sought to redress its highly inequitable land distribution through a series of land-reform programs. In this study we examine land-redistribution efforts in two of South Africa's provinces, the Western Cape and Limpopo. By analyzing a cross-section of projects in these two locales we develop a political ecology of stymied land-reform possibilities to explain the limited progress to date. Given South Africa's ambitious goal of redistributing 30 percent of its white-owned land by 2014 and the incremental and flawed nature of its redistribution program, we argue that the process is like trying to put out a fire with a broken teacup. Our results are based on interviews with policymakers, commercial farmers, and land-redistribution beneficiaries, as well as on an analysis of land-use change in Limpopo Province.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Volume
98
Journal Number
3
Journal Pages
322-338
Journal Name
Geographical Review
Keywords
land redistribution
Limpopo Province
political ecology
South Africa
Western Cape Province
land reform
policies
land use
Africa