THE AGRICULTURAL POTENTIAL AND SUSTAINABILITY OF REDISTRIBUTED LAND IN SOUTH AFRICA: THE CASE OF MZIKAZI, KWAZULU-NATAL

2004 
ABSTRACT In February 1994 South Africans and the rest of the world witnessed the birth of a democratically elected government in South Africa. One of the immediate objectives of this new form of governance was, through the land reform programme, to redistribute land to an estimated 25 million people who were dispossessed of this vital resource during the apartheid era. The Department of Land Affairs, charged with this function, has thus far made land available to some 500 000 landless people with the majority being subsistence farmers. The quest for ownership of land took precedence over the suitability of such land to sustain the livelihood of these poor communities. Unproductive and unsustainable land could result in further povertisation of already impoverished communities. The Mzikazi community, located some 140 kilometres from the eThekwini city centre (Durban Metropolis), is one such community that benefitted from the Land Redistribution Programme. The suitability of the redistributed land to suppor...
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