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Healing the land : monitoring transformation and agricultural sustainability on a Western Cape land reform project

This thesis examines the viability of participatory monitoring in instituting a sustainable agriculture-based land reform programme in South Africa. The legacies of colonial and apartheid-era racial injustices have severely constrained access to land for agricultural production. Moreover, the impact...

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Main Author: Mohamed, Najma
Other Authors: Parnell, Sue
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mohamed, Najma
author2 Parnell, Sue
author_browse Mohamed, Najma
Parnell, Sue
author_facet Parnell, Sue
Mohamed, Najma
author_sort Mohamed, Najma
collection Thesis
description This thesis examines the viability of participatory monitoring in instituting a sustainable agriculture-based land reform programme in South Africa. The legacies of colonial and apartheid-era racial injustices have severely constrained access to land for agricultural production. Moreover, the impact of commercial agriculture on nature and society, warrants that alternative approaches to agriculture be investigated. Land reform provides a unique opportunity to motivate for social change, premised on both agricultural sustainability (land) and social transformation (life). Partnership-based models, such as farm worker equity share schemes, dominate land reform opportunities in the Western Cape. The Warmwater farming Trust, a land reform project in the Western Cape premised on this model, formed the case study component of my research. Political ecology was adopted as the theoretical framework for linking structural underpinnings and the locale. Participatory research methods were employed to develop the indicator-based participatory monitoring system on Warmwater. These included farming systems research, participatory rural appraisal and sustainability indicators. The research shows that a range of factors, related to the structures in society, the nature of the locale, and local-level action underscore land and agrarian reform in South Africa. Moreover, the research provides important insights into the transformative capacity of partnership-based land reform models. Participatory monitoring holds benefits for the farmers of Warmwater by providing an opportunity to monitor changes related to land and life and increasing their participation in planning and decision-making processes on the farm. Despite obstacles posed by structural constraints to land and agrarian reform, this thesis postulates three mechanisms to addressing the land-life dialectic. These include a consideration of new land reform models, a conflation of environmental and social justice considerations, and the promotion of local-level action geared towards social transformation and agricultural sustainability. The reconstruction of the South African landscape could be attained by adopting a participatory, sustainable agriculture-based land reform programme, which incorporates processes such as participatory monitoring.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:27.580Z
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 Environmental and Geographical Science
publisherStr Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38439 Healing the land : monitoring transformation and agricultural sustainability on a Western Cape land reform project Mohamed, Najma Parnell, Sue Karaan, Mohammad Agricultural laborers - South Africa - Western Cape. This thesis examines the viability of participatory monitoring in instituting a sustainable agriculture-based land reform programme in South Africa. The legacies of colonial and apartheid-era racial injustices have severely constrained access to land for agricultural production. Moreover, the impact of commercial agriculture on nature and society, warrants that alternative approaches to agriculture be investigated. Land reform provides a unique opportunity to motivate for social change, premised on both agricultural sustainability (land) and social transformation (life). Partnership-based models, such as farm worker equity share schemes, dominate land reform opportunities in the Western Cape. The Warmwater farming Trust, a land reform project in the Western Cape premised on this model, formed the case study component of my research. Political ecology was adopted as the theoretical framework for linking structural underpinnings and the locale. Participatory research methods were employed to develop the indicator-based participatory monitoring system on Warmwater. These included farming systems research, participatory rural appraisal and sustainability indicators. The research shows that a range of factors, related to the structures in society, the nature of the locale, and local-level action underscore land and agrarian reform in South Africa. Moreover, the research provides important insights into the transformative capacity of partnership-based land reform models. Participatory monitoring holds benefits for the farmers of Warmwater by providing an opportunity to monitor changes related to land and life and increasing their participation in planning and decision-making processes on the farm. Despite obstacles posed by structural constraints to land and agrarian reform, this thesis postulates three mechanisms to addressing the land-life dialectic. These include a consideration of new land reform models, a conflation of environmental and social justice considerations, and the promotion of local-level action geared towards social transformation and agricultural sustainability. The reconstruction of the South African landscape could be attained by adopting a participatory, sustainable agriculture-based land reform programme, which incorporates processes such as participatory monitoring. 2023-09-07T10:29:02Z 2023-09-07T10:29:02Z 1999 2023-09-07T10:18:04Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38439 eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Agricultural laborers - South Africa - Western Cape.
Mohamed, Najma
Healing the land : monitoring transformation and agricultural sustainability on a Western Cape land reform project
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Healing the land : monitoring transformation and agricultural sustainability on a Western Cape land reform project
title_full Healing the land : monitoring transformation and agricultural sustainability on a Western Cape land reform project
title_fullStr Healing the land : monitoring transformation and agricultural sustainability on a Western Cape land reform project
title_full_unstemmed Healing the land : monitoring transformation and agricultural sustainability on a Western Cape land reform project
title_short Healing the land : monitoring transformation and agricultural sustainability on a Western Cape land reform project
title_sort healing the land monitoring transformation and agricultural sustainability on a western cape land reform project
topic Agricultural laborers - South Africa - Western Cape.
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38439
work_keys_str_mv AT mohamednajma healingthelandmonitoringtransformationandagriculturalsustainabilityonawesterncapelandreformproject