Type | Journal Article - University of Miami Law School Institutional Repository |
Title | Native Title in Australia and South Africa: A Search for Something That Lasts |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 22 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2014 |
Page numbers | 233-259 |
URL | http://repository.law.miami.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1276&context=umiclr |
Abstract | After the Apartheid ended in 1994, South Africa created a new constitution that severely limited the government's ability to expropriate land. 9 This led to the numerous laws passed by the white minority to take land without compensation during the Apartheid.1o However, the new constitution arguably brought about "victor's justice."11 When Nelson Mandela became president in 1994, whites owned 87% of the land despite representing less than 10% of the population. 12 In 2003, eight years after the reform process began, whites owned 70% of the land, but less than half of the claims had been settled.13 However, by 2010, the white population again owned 7 9 % of the land.14 This unfortunate regression occurred because of failed policies that began in the 1990s. The Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP), the African National Congress's blueprint for reform, created broad plans for eliminating many of the inequalities- specifically, racial and gender-fostered under the Apartheid.15 Unfortunately, the program never identified any distinct strategies to fully combat the serious land distribution crisis in South Africa.16 The program created a "willing-buyer-willing-seller" principle "without direct government involvement except as a facilitator to provide financialassistance."1 7 The plan also did not contemplate expropriation, instead choosing to regard it as a last resort when the voluntary market had not met the land demand. 18 As a result, South Africa remains woefully behind its goal of redistributing 30% of the land in the first five years after the fall of the Apartheid. 19 There are questions that need to be answered: How did we get to this slow-moving system? What needs to be done to improve it? Who is moving in the best direction? This Article will examine these questions more clearly. Part I explores the history and status of indigenous land rights in these countries. Part II analyzes how these countries might move forward considering the current issues that have arisen from their past policies. Finally, Part III concludes which country is providing the best direction for solving the problems natives face when attempting to acquire land. |
» | South Africa - Census 2011 |