Type | Report |
Title | Post-apartheid spatial inequality: obstacles of land use management on township micro-enterprise formalisation |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2017 |
Publisher | 2 Sustainable Livelihoods Foundation |
URL | http://www.livelihoods.org.za/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/SLF_Post-Apartheid_Spatial_Inequality_-_lr_version.pdf |
Abstract | Land use management centres on the notion of protecting people and the environment from the externalities of development. It is central to strategic planning to ensure the sustainable provision of public utilities, transport infrastructure, housing and economic infrastructure. Land use management also provides an important legal/institutional framework to uphold property values and so safeguard the municipal tax base and investment. In South Africa there is a complex web of legislation (which transverses the three tiers of government) through which the state aims to manage land, control building developments, and determine the places and forms in which people can conduct business and operate an enterprise. The Spatial Planning and Land Use Management Act (SPLUMA), 2013, clarifies the roles of government in land use management. SPLUMA is an important step towards redressing the apartheid legacy of spatial injustice: the Act introduces the four principals of spatial justice, spatial sustainability, spatial resilience, and efficient and good administration to guide land use governance. |
» | South Africa - Quarterly Labour Force Survey 2016 |