Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg

Olaf Zenker

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Compensation Through Expropriation without Compensation? Land Reform and the Future of Redistributive Justice in South Africa

The decision by the South African Parliament in February 2018 to review  the constitutional property clause possibly allowing for expropriation  without compensation has fervently brought the land question back into  public debate. While expressing a deeply felt and justified popular  discontent that land reform has fallen short of its promises to redress  race-based dispossessions of the colonial past, this debate  arguably also distracts from the fact that land reform’s   insufficiencies have  been mostly political rather than  constitutional/legal and often related  to problems of implementation.  Moreover, this controversy raises thorny questions with regard to the   justice of current and future redress and redistribution: who actually  counts as a victim of historical dispossession and hence should be a  legitimate beneficiary and who should pay for this redress today: the  historical perpetrators, the current landowners, all beneficiaries of  colonialism, society at large  etc.? To put it more boldly, what kind of  justice is being instituted, if compensation for historical  expropriation is achieved through current expropriation without  compensation, and is this the form of redistributive justice that will  benefit South Africa in the best  possible way in the future? This  project critically interrogates the new developments in South African  land reform with regard to these broader issues of redistributive  justice. It does so through preparing and facilitating a constructive  exchange amongst experts in the fields of land reform, constitutional  and property law, taxation and state budget as well as redistributive  justice. An international STIAS conference in 2020 will take stock of   this exchange to be subsequently published as both critical commentary  of and policy input for the transformation that South Africa so  desperately needs.

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Project group at the Stellenbosch Institute for Advanced Study (STIAS)

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