
Published online:
22 March 2012
Published in print:
07 November 1996
Online ISBN:
9780191682162
Print ISBN:
9780198260875
Contents
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I. Colonization I. Colonization
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1. The Cape Colony 1. The Cape Colony
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2. Extension of the eastern Cape frontier 2. Extension of the eastern Cape frontier
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3. Experiments with individual tenure 3. Experiments with individual tenure
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4. Natal: reserves and trusteeship 4. Natal: reserves and trusteeship
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5. The Orange Free State 5. The Orange Free State
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6. The Transvaal 6. The Transvaal
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II. Segregation II. Segregation
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1. The Lagden Report and the 1913 Land Act 1. The Lagden Report and the 1913 Land Act
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2. The 1936 Trust and Land Act 2. The 1936 Trust and Land Act
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III. Apartheid III. Apartheid
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1. The Tomlinson Commission and its aftermath 1. The Tomlinson Commission and its aftermath
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2. From bantustans to homelands 2. From bantustans to homelands
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3. Reforms of the 1980s: ‘orderly urbanization’ 3. Reforms of the 1980s: ‘orderly urbanization’
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IV. The 1990S and the Interim Constitution IV. The 1990S and the Interim Constitution
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1. Nationalist Party reforms 1. Nationalist Party reforms
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2. The Interim Constitution: regaining lost titles 2. The Interim Constitution: regaining lost titles
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Chapter
2. African Land—a History of Dispossession
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Pages
65–94
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Published:November 1996
Cite
Bennett, T. W., 'African Land—a History of Dispossession', in Reinhard Zimmermann, and Daniel Visser (eds), Southern Cross: Civil Law and Common Law in South Africa (Oxford , 1996; online edn, Oxford Academic, 22 Mar. 2012), https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198260875.003.0003, accessed 28 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
Property holding is a direct index of power and wealth. A telling indication of the poverty and powerlessness of Africans in South Africa is that they have title to only 13% of the country's total land area, of which only one-third is subject to indigenous tenures. This chapter presents a history of South African land law, which details how African lands were appropriated by white settlers and how the local systems of landholding were replaced with European tenures.
Subject
History of Law
Collection:
Oxford Scholarship Online
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