Land & Housing

SACSIS endorses the right of the poor to decent housing. We also support solutions aimed at transforming the unequal balance in land ownership, which currently concentrates much of South Africa's land in a few hands.

Poverty Wages and Inadequate Housing

Picture: balazsgardi/Flickr Anna Majavu - Last week at Lonmin mines, the ANC saw the consequences of allowing South Africa to remain one of the most unequal countries in the world. The steadfast refusal of the mineworkers to continue their dangerous work without a substantial pay increase, and the consequent massacre of the workers by police are just the start of what is yet to come. The police killings appear to have sparked a level of outrage amongst the Black poor and working class that could prove to be a tipping point. For...

Wasted Wealth - Leveraging the Property of the Poor

Picture: No Lands Too Foreign/Flickr Glenn Ashton - Land ownership is a prickly problem in South Africa, which has not yet been properly addressed, despite its prioritisation in 1994. The primary focus on land redistribution has understandably, but perhaps unwisely, centred on the issue of agricultural land holdings. Given increased rates of urbanisation, it can be argued that urban land tenure demands similar, if not higher levels of attention. Land is at the foundation of conventional - and informal - economic wealth, in both developed...

To Be Citizens, Not Children

Picture: midnightmagic.co.uk Richard Pithouse - Tokyo Sexwale recently announced, in Brandfort, in a performance carefully choreographed to be rich with the symbolism of a once insurgent nationalism, that Winnie Mandikizela-Mandela will lead a new government task team on informal settlements. “She will”, he said, “help us develop informal settlements because we cannot solve it without the Winnie Madikizela-Mandela motherly heart.” In the national imagination Brandfort is the feminine version of Robben Island, a...

Mother City to Some: The Story of Housing in Cape Town

Picture: Lizane Louw Mandisi Majavu - Cape Town is the second largest city in South Africa. Affectionately known as the ‘mother city’, it is home to about 3,4 million people. Helen Zille recently argued in the Sunday Times that Cape Town is “the least unequal city in South Africa.” The point, however, is that Cape Town is an unequal city - a white city that is not very motherly towards poor people of colour. A large number of people of colour live in poverty. It is estimated that 400 000 families of...

Land Nationalisation

Picture: www.snn.sofimun.org Stephen Greenberg - ANCYL President Julius Malema’s recent comments on land nationalisation have caused quite a stir. The owners of wealth thought this topic had been put to rest with the passing of the 1996 Constitution, which secures private property rights. It is no wonder, then, that newspapers and magazines are filled with Professors and other experts proclaiming that nationalisation is not permitted in the Constitution. That debate doesn’t concern us here. The issue is whether or...

Food Insecurity: Who Will Save Us, the Smallholder or Large-scale Farmer?

Picture: World Bank Saliem Fakir - Land reform in South Africa is back as a lead item on the government’s agenda. It is a tacit admission that the process over the last seventeen years was a failure. The issue must also be seen in the light of growing food insecurity, as food prices seem to only go up rather than down. South Africa’s land reform policy is not only a way to redress past loss but also an attempt to diversify farming as mainly white farmers dominate farming. However, in opening up the space...