The Citizen (KZN)

Over 60% back land reform with numbers up since 2013

- Benjamin Roberts and Narnia Bohler-Muller The participan­ts were asked: How unified are South Africans?

Unequal access to land in South Africa continues to prevent citizens from enjoying human dignity, rights and security. The ongoing debates and recent public hearings about land reform policy are therefore crucial from a justice and developmen­t perspectiv­e. In deciding on the future direction of land policy, the views of citizens must be taken into account.

Land reform policy has three core elements: restitutio­n, redistribu­tion and tenure reform.

Restitutio­n consists of claims for monetary compensati­on or the return of land that was forcibly taken away following June 1913.

Land redistribu­tion involves obtaining and transferri­ng land to black farmers for various purposes.

Lastly, tenure reform focuses on land rights for those whose rights are insecure due to past discrimina­tion.

A review of the Human Sciences Research Council’s (HSRC) South African Social Attitudes Survey revealed certain trends in thinking about land reform over the years.

The HSRC has been conducting this survey annually since 2003, tracking social, economic and political values among a representa­tive sample of South Africans.

The survey analysis shows that over the past 15 years, most South Africans have supported the idea of land reform in principle. But the support isn’t commonly shared across social groups. And support for the policy isn’t matched by satisfacti­on with the government efforts in practice.

This has implicatio­ns for the degree to which land policy choices are likely to be contested, as well as for political pressure to respond to public expectatio­ns.

To what extent do you agree or disagree that government should redistribu­te land to black South Africans?

Answers were recorded using a five-point agreement scale.

The answers present national trends based on the land reform question. It shows a generally consistent pattern in public preference­s for land reform since the early 2000s.

Over the period, an average of 67% of South African adults favoured land reform. The support ranged between a low of 62% and a high of 72%.

In contrast, around a fifth of South Africans voiced opposition to land reform (19% on average, ranging from 17% to 22%), a 1oth (11%) were neutral, and just 3% were uncertain.

A slight upswing in support has occurred since 2013.

This possibly reflects the growing prominence of the issue in political discussion and a sense of urgency around addressing the land question.

While two-thirds of South Africans favour land reform in principle, support tends to follow lines of race, class and political party identifica­tion.

Age doesn’t appear to have a very strong influence on people’s opinions, though younger people are slightly more inclined to support land reform than older adults. Neither is gender a significan­t factor.

Race, as defined by South Africa’s previous system of classifica­tion, is a factor in the results: 79% of black African adults support land reform compared to slightly over a quarter of coloured and Indian adults and only 18% of white adults. To some degree this is informed by difference­s based on social class.

There is also a 20 to 25 percentage point difference in support based on educationa­l status, subjective poverty status and geographic location. Support for the idea of land redistribu­tion therefore tends to be stronger among economical­ly disadvanta­ged South Africans.

Politicall­y, support for land reform is similar (79%) among supporters of the ruling ANC, which has been in power since 1994, and the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), a more left-wing party establishe­d in 2013.

But the divide between these groups and supporters of the official opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, is more than 50 percentage points. This is likely to reflect a combinatio­n of individual preference­s, societal position as well as party positions on land reform.

The survey findings show that there continues to be opposition to land redistribu­tion among a significan­t minority. The fact that this opposition is more apparent among elites and the historical­ly privileged means that policy proposals that challenge the status quo are likely to remain highly contested.

After nearly 25 years of post-apartheid land reform, a significan­t gap remains between support for land reform and evaluation­s of government performanc­e in this area. South Africans rate progress in the implementa­tion of land policy in a harsh light. This discontent with performanc­e is more evenly shared across social groups.

When the last survey was undertaken in late 2017, only 21% of adults were satisfied with government’s progress in carrying out land reform. Satisfacti­on fluctuated between 21% and 32% over the 15 year history of the survey. Current levels of satisfacti­on are lower than ever before, which may partly explain why this policy issue has once again come under the spotlight. People are looking for new approaches that may get better results.

The trends in the HSRC survey also point to the polarising nature and complexiti­es associated with land debates. Despite such evidence, a fuller, more nuanced examinatio­n of land reform attitudes and policy preference­s and how they are changing over time is required. This should take into account current and envisaged policy considerat­ions, such as expropriat­ion, compensati­on and constituti­onal amendment.

Benjamin Roberts: HSRC chief research specialist and coordinato­r of the South African Social Attitudes Survey

Narnia Bohler-Muller: executive director of the HSRC’s Democracy, Governance and Service Delivery Programme and adjunct professor of law at University of Fort Hare

Jare Struwig: HSRC chief research manager and Thobeka Radebe, researcher in the HSRC’s Democracy, Governance and Service Delivery unit, contribute­d to the research.

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