Growth, exclusion and vulnerability: evaluation of the socio-spatial transformation of post-apartheid Pretoria-Tshwane (South Africa)

Apartheid left South African city regions with two major challenges: social integration at a city level and spatial integration at a regional level. The task to finds solutions to these problems was left to municipalities, the lowest level of the three trier government system introduced after 1994....

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Andre Horn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asociación Española de Geografía 2020-12-01
Series:Boletín de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.bage.age-geografia.es/ojs/index.php/bage/article/view/3001
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1823857503525404672
author Andre Horn
author_facet Andre Horn
author_sort Andre Horn
collection DOAJ
description Apartheid left South African city regions with two major challenges: social integration at a city level and spatial integration at a regional level. The task to finds solutions to these problems was left to municipalities, the lowest level of the three trier government system introduced after 1994. This article critically evaluates the success of the post-apartheid municipal government of Pretoria-Tshwane to address the said challenges in the reorganization of the city region over a 25-year period. The paper starts with a reconstruction of the apartheid city to display its socio-spatial contrasts and to define the challenge of integration and compaction. The investigation is based on literature, census information and observation. The main finding is that the progress made with the integration of the city at both scales is being neutralized by demographic trends, choice of association, urban sprawl, uncertain management, the scale of aspirations, unrealistic expectations and, most of all, municipal incapacity. The failure of the local government of Pretoria-Tshwane to achieve the said goals points to the inefficiency of the current approach that obligates municipalities with the complete task to rectify the dichotomies of the apartheid city system within their regions.  It is advocated that additional governmental entities be implemented to support local governments with the planning and re-development of post-apartheid city-regions.
format Article
id doaj-art-817fdf12350b4118bb2a5ee2397bff63
institution Kabale University
issn 0212-9426
2605-3322
language English
publishDate 2020-12-01
publisher Asociación Española de Geografía
record_format Article
series Boletín de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles
spelling doaj-art-817fdf12350b4118bb2a5ee2397bff632025-02-11T20:40:09ZengAsociación Española de GeografíaBoletín de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles0212-94262605-33222020-12-018710.21138/bage.3001Growth, exclusion and vulnerability: evaluation of the socio-spatial transformation of post-apartheid Pretoria-Tshwane (South Africa)Andre Horn0University of South Africa Apartheid left South African city regions with two major challenges: social integration at a city level and spatial integration at a regional level. The task to finds solutions to these problems was left to municipalities, the lowest level of the three trier government system introduced after 1994. This article critically evaluates the success of the post-apartheid municipal government of Pretoria-Tshwane to address the said challenges in the reorganization of the city region over a 25-year period. The paper starts with a reconstruction of the apartheid city to display its socio-spatial contrasts and to define the challenge of integration and compaction. The investigation is based on literature, census information and observation. The main finding is that the progress made with the integration of the city at both scales is being neutralized by demographic trends, choice of association, urban sprawl, uncertain management, the scale of aspirations, unrealistic expectations and, most of all, municipal incapacity. The failure of the local government of Pretoria-Tshwane to achieve the said goals points to the inefficiency of the current approach that obligates municipalities with the complete task to rectify the dichotomies of the apartheid city system within their regions.  It is advocated that additional governmental entities be implemented to support local governments with the planning and re-development of post-apartheid city-regions. http://www.bage.age-geografia.es/ojs/index.php/bage/article/view/3001Pretoria-Tshwanelocal governmentspatial integrationregional developmentsupportive need
spellingShingle Andre Horn
Growth, exclusion and vulnerability: evaluation of the socio-spatial transformation of post-apartheid Pretoria-Tshwane (South Africa)
Boletín de la Asociación de Geógrafos Españoles
Pretoria-Tshwane
local government
spatial integration
regional development
supportive need
title Growth, exclusion and vulnerability: evaluation of the socio-spatial transformation of post-apartheid Pretoria-Tshwane (South Africa)
title_full Growth, exclusion and vulnerability: evaluation of the socio-spatial transformation of post-apartheid Pretoria-Tshwane (South Africa)
title_fullStr Growth, exclusion and vulnerability: evaluation of the socio-spatial transformation of post-apartheid Pretoria-Tshwane (South Africa)
title_full_unstemmed Growth, exclusion and vulnerability: evaluation of the socio-spatial transformation of post-apartheid Pretoria-Tshwane (South Africa)
title_short Growth, exclusion and vulnerability: evaluation of the socio-spatial transformation of post-apartheid Pretoria-Tshwane (South Africa)
title_sort growth exclusion and vulnerability evaluation of the socio spatial transformation of post apartheid pretoria tshwane south africa
topic Pretoria-Tshwane
local government
spatial integration
regional development
supportive need
url http://www.bage.age-geografia.es/ojs/index.php/bage/article/view/3001
work_keys_str_mv AT andrehorn growthexclusionandvulnerabilityevaluationofthesociospatialtransformationofpostapartheidpretoriatshwanesouthafrica