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“This is the place that the women built”: A case study of the nexus of formalised land rights and housing recognition on spatial justice in Cape Town

Many citizens and residents of Post-Apartheid South Africa suffer from past spatial planning policies that deprived black South Africans of access to economic opportunity. This research investigated how formalisation of land rights inhibits the capability of the urban poor in Cape Town to access urb...

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Main Author: Clark, Sarah
Other Authors: Chitonge, Horman
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: African Studies 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Clark, Sarah
author2 Chitonge, Horman
author_browse Chitonge, Horman
Clark, Sarah
author_facet Chitonge, Horman
Clark, Sarah
author_sort Clark, Sarah
collection Thesis
description Many citizens and residents of Post-Apartheid South Africa suffer from past spatial planning policies that deprived black South Africans of access to economic opportunity. This research investigated how formalisation of land rights inhibits the capability of the urban poor in Cape Town to access urban opportunity. The main research question explored whether the formalisation of land rights affects alienation of the residents of Victoria Mxenge (VMX) settlement from urban access. The study uses the VMX case study to highlight the challenges associated with formalising land rights in poor urban areas. VMX is a non-residentially zoned settlement in Cape Town that consists of approximately 140 homes constructed under a formal Communal Property Association (CPA) title deed that allows for communal land ownership. Informal processes and citizenship, the themes of the research, were drawn out of the main study question and objectives. The theory of access was selected as the research' conceptual framework. This framework helps to explain the relationship of the VMX community to land, housing, and access to associated urban opportunity. The research methodology was founded on qualitative data collection, specifically interviews with seven members of the VMX community, supported by secondary review of provincial data and policy documentation. Formalisation and municipal policy were reviewed for the rezoning of the VMX settlement as a formal township, as well as the replacement of the CPA deed with individual title deeds for VMX residents. Interviews with the VMX community found that residents felt a necessity for additional formalisation to access further value from the rights under the CPA deed. Residents of VMX experienced benefits from the CPA title deed, however, found limitations in their manufactured forms of access. Informal tools and solutions are perceived as unacknowledged by government and government assistance to individualise ownership is slow and not prioritised. Comparisons to superior services in nearby communities led respondents to see individual title deeds as preferable to the CPA deed. VMX exemplifies how, in an urban setting, having land and housing still presents limitations for access to services and opportunity. Further formalisation, such as residential zoning and/or individual title deeds, would reduce alienation for VMX residents, increase urban access, and enhance citizenship. Recognition as citizens is fundamental to access. Lessons learned from VMX can be applied by government and community members manufacturing forms of access. Community-led solutions are valid and should be further legitimised in the sphere of land and housing.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:48.261Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher African Studies
publisherStr African Studies
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37070 “This is the place that the women built”: A case study of the nexus of formalised land rights and housing recognition on spatial justice in Cape Town Clark, Sarah Chitonge, Horman African Studies Many citizens and residents of Post-Apartheid South Africa suffer from past spatial planning policies that deprived black South Africans of access to economic opportunity. This research investigated how formalisation of land rights inhibits the capability of the urban poor in Cape Town to access urban opportunity. The main research question explored whether the formalisation of land rights affects alienation of the residents of Victoria Mxenge (VMX) settlement from urban access. The study uses the VMX case study to highlight the challenges associated with formalising land rights in poor urban areas. VMX is a non-residentially zoned settlement in Cape Town that consists of approximately 140 homes constructed under a formal Communal Property Association (CPA) title deed that allows for communal land ownership. Informal processes and citizenship, the themes of the research, were drawn out of the main study question and objectives. The theory of access was selected as the research' conceptual framework. This framework helps to explain the relationship of the VMX community to land, housing, and access to associated urban opportunity. The research methodology was founded on qualitative data collection, specifically interviews with seven members of the VMX community, supported by secondary review of provincial data and policy documentation. Formalisation and municipal policy were reviewed for the rezoning of the VMX settlement as a formal township, as well as the replacement of the CPA deed with individual title deeds for VMX residents. Interviews with the VMX community found that residents felt a necessity for additional formalisation to access further value from the rights under the CPA deed. Residents of VMX experienced benefits from the CPA title deed, however, found limitations in their manufactured forms of access. Informal tools and solutions are perceived as unacknowledged by government and government assistance to individualise ownership is slow and not prioritised. Comparisons to superior services in nearby communities led respondents to see individual title deeds as preferable to the CPA deed. VMX exemplifies how, in an urban setting, having land and housing still presents limitations for access to services and opportunity. Further formalisation, such as residential zoning and/or individual title deeds, would reduce alienation for VMX residents, increase urban access, and enhance citizenship. Recognition as citizens is fundamental to access. Lessons learned from VMX can be applied by government and community members manufacturing forms of access. Community-led solutions are valid and should be further legitimised in the sphere of land and housing. 2023-02-23T14:08:23Z 2023-02-23T14:08:23Z 2022 2023-02-20T12:25:58Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37070 eng application/pdf African Studies Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle African Studies
Clark, Sarah
“This is the place that the women built”: A case study of the nexus of formalised land rights and housing recognition on spatial justice in Cape Town
thesis_degree_str Master's
title “This is the place that the women built”: A case study of the nexus of formalised land rights and housing recognition on spatial justice in Cape Town
title_full “This is the place that the women built”: A case study of the nexus of formalised land rights and housing recognition on spatial justice in Cape Town
title_fullStr “This is the place that the women built”: A case study of the nexus of formalised land rights and housing recognition on spatial justice in Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed “This is the place that the women built”: A case study of the nexus of formalised land rights and housing recognition on spatial justice in Cape Town
title_short “This is the place that the women built”: A case study of the nexus of formalised land rights and housing recognition on spatial justice in Cape Town
title_sort this is the place that the women built a case study of the nexus of formalised land rights and housing recognition on spatial justice in cape town
topic African Studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37070
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