Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

“They sent me home to die” – occupational diseases and the gold mining industry in post-apartheid South Africa

In 2016 a class action suit was certified in the case of Nkala & Others v Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited & Others (2016). The action was instituted by representatives of thousands of current and former miners from Southern African countries. Their intent was to claim damages from mining...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Potgieter, Cathy-Ann
Other Authors: Scanlon, Helen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Political Studies 2023
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613300488929280
access_status_str Open Access
author Potgieter, Cathy-Ann
author2 Scanlon, Helen
author_browse Potgieter, Cathy-Ann
Scanlon, Helen
author_facet Scanlon, Helen
Potgieter, Cathy-Ann
author_sort Potgieter, Cathy-Ann
collection Thesis
description In 2016 a class action suit was certified in the case of Nkala & Others v Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited & Others (2016). The action was instituted by representatives of thousands of current and former miners from Southern African countries. Their intent was to claim damages from mining companies for causing their contraction of silicosis and/or tuberculosis as a result of poor working conditions. Before the Court could make any pronouncement on liability, the parties reached an agreement out of court whereby the mining companies set up the Tshiamiso Trust to provide for compensation. This thesis contextualises the Nkala case in post-apartheid South Africa, where economic inequalities have intensified despite the constitutional transition. Where the law was used in the past to support injustice, the intention of law-making after the transition was to create a new framework that sought to protect human rights, including socio-economic rights. The extent to which it is able to effect justice to those most profoundly impacted by apartheid policies falls under scrutiny in the face of prevailing inequality, especially in the context of mining labour relations. This thesis therefore questions whether this new framework has been able to deliver the promise of justice for miners who find themselves located within a context of over a century of racialised labour exploitation and extremely hazardous working conditions. That the applicants in the Nkala case had to resort to the common law to vindicate their rights to adequate compensation despite the existence of legislation that purports to provide for this calls into question the practical efficacy of such rights-based legislation. Where the Court in the Nkala case acknowledged the inadequacy of the legislative mechanism for occupational disease and injury, the potential of the Trust in providing for meaningful compensation must fall under scrutiny. The role that compensation plays in the broader context of remedial justice will therefore be analysed to consider where the outcome of the Nkala case may fall short in addressing the structural injustices caused by the mining industry.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37762
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:57.504Z
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 Department of Political Studies
publisherStr Department of Political Studies
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37762 “They sent me home to die” – occupational diseases and the gold mining industry in post-apartheid South Africa Potgieter, Cathy-Ann Scanlon, Helen Politics In 2016 a class action suit was certified in the case of Nkala & Others v Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited & Others (2016). The action was instituted by representatives of thousands of current and former miners from Southern African countries. Their intent was to claim damages from mining companies for causing their contraction of silicosis and/or tuberculosis as a result of poor working conditions. Before the Court could make any pronouncement on liability, the parties reached an agreement out of court whereby the mining companies set up the Tshiamiso Trust to provide for compensation. This thesis contextualises the Nkala case in post-apartheid South Africa, where economic inequalities have intensified despite the constitutional transition. Where the law was used in the past to support injustice, the intention of law-making after the transition was to create a new framework that sought to protect human rights, including socio-economic rights. The extent to which it is able to effect justice to those most profoundly impacted by apartheid policies falls under scrutiny in the face of prevailing inequality, especially in the context of mining labour relations. This thesis therefore questions whether this new framework has been able to deliver the promise of justice for miners who find themselves located within a context of over a century of racialised labour exploitation and extremely hazardous working conditions. That the applicants in the Nkala case had to resort to the common law to vindicate their rights to adequate compensation despite the existence of legislation that purports to provide for this calls into question the practical efficacy of such rights-based legislation. Where the Court in the Nkala case acknowledged the inadequacy of the legislative mechanism for occupational disease and injury, the potential of the Trust in providing for meaningful compensation must fall under scrutiny. The role that compensation plays in the broader context of remedial justice will therefore be analysed to consider where the outcome of the Nkala case may fall short in addressing the structural injustices caused by the mining industry. 2023-04-18T08:59:16Z 2023-04-18T08:59:16Z 2022 2023-04-14T10:09:12Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37762 eng application/pdf Department of Political Studies Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Politics
Potgieter, Cathy-Ann
“They sent me home to die” – occupational diseases and the gold mining industry in post-apartheid South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title “They sent me home to die” – occupational diseases and the gold mining industry in post-apartheid South Africa
title_full “They sent me home to die” – occupational diseases and the gold mining industry in post-apartheid South Africa
title_fullStr “They sent me home to die” – occupational diseases and the gold mining industry in post-apartheid South Africa
title_full_unstemmed “They sent me home to die” – occupational diseases and the gold mining industry in post-apartheid South Africa
title_short “They sent me home to die” – occupational diseases and the gold mining industry in post-apartheid South Africa
title_sort they sent me home to die occupational diseases and the gold mining industry in post apartheid south africa
topic Politics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37762
work_keys_str_mv AT potgietercathyann theysentmehometodieoccupationaldiseasesandthegoldminingindustryinpostapartheidsouthafrica