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Township (South Africa)

In South Africa, the terms township and location usually refer to the often underdeveloped racially segregated urban areas that, from the late 19th century until the end of apartheid, were reserved for non-whites, namely Black Africans, Coloureds and Indians. Townships were usually built on the periphery of towns and cities.[1][2] The term township also has a distinct legal meaning in South Africa's system of land title, which carries no racial connotations.

The town of Hankey (foreground), with accompanying township (background) on the edge of the town.
Children in a township near Cape Town in 1989
Children in a township near Cape Town

Townships for non-whites were also called locations or lokasies in Afrikaans and are often still referred to by that name in smaller towns. The slang term "kasie/kasi", a popular short version of "lokasie" is also used. Townships sometimes have large informal settlements nearby.

History

Early development

During 1900-1950 (roughly), the majority of the black population in major urban areas lived in hostels or servants' accommodations provided by employers and were mostly single men. In the period during and following World War II urban areas of South Africa experienced a rapid period of urbanization as the colour bar was relaxed due to the war. Neither employers nor the government built new accommodations or homes for the influx of new residents. This led to overcrowding, poor living conditions, and the absence of amenities thereby contributing to high levels of crime and violence. High rents and overcrowding led to land invasions and the growth of shack settlements which were largely ignored by government.[3]

By 1950 a large portion of the urban black population lived in townships. In 1950, upwards of 100,000 people were living in townships on the Witwatersrand area, 50,000 people in Cato Manor in Durban, and an estimated 150,000 black and colored people lived in townships in Cape Town.[3]

Living conditions in the shack township settlements were low but had the advantage over other more established options in the hostels of being cheap and largely unregulated by the apartheid era South African Police.[3]

Apartheid: 1948–1994

During the era of ideological apartheid, black people were evicted from properties that were in areas designated as "white only" and forced to move into segregated townships. Separate townships were established for each of the three designated non-white race groups – black people, Coloureds and Indians – as per the Population Registration Act, 1950. Legislation that enabled the apartheid government to do this included the Group Areas Act.

Post-apartheid

Most South African towns and cities have at least one township associated with them. Some old townships have seen rapid development since 1994 with, for instance, wealthy and middle-income areas sprouting in parts of Soweto and Chatsworth. Despite their origins in apartheid South Africa, today the terms township, location and informal settlement are not used pejoratively. However policy makers[who?] are,[when?] as in the 1950s, once again using the term 'slums' in a highly pejorative way.[4]

Social issues

Township communities are faced with several social problems. Most often, the residents of townships do not own the land on which their houses are built. In effect, these houses are built illegally.[5] Construction is informal and unregulated by the government. This results in a lack of access to basic services such as sewerage, electricity, roads, and clean water, which adversely affects residents' quality of life.[5]

Infrastructure problems

Sewerage, water, and electrical Infrastructure within townships is often in need of repair, resulting in a lack of sanitation due to problems with accessibility, and availability. Electricity, water and sewerage are managed by different government departments, resulting in inefficiencies in the absence of substantial co-ordination at all stages of the project planning, budgeting, and implementation cycle.[5]

Sewerage

 
Khayelitsha, Township along N2 road near Cape Town (2015)

The sewer systems within townships are poorly planned and constructed.[citation needed] The population of townships typically grows faster than the infrastructure was planned for, causing overloads that result in blockages, surges, and overflows. There are often a limited number of public toilets that are over-used, abused, and quickly become health hazards for the communities. Another issue is poor access to maintenance activities which is caused by the lack of space between houses. Some of the areas on the township peripheries or near riverbanks do not have access to facilities because they are not connected to the formal waterborne sewerage system.[citation needed]

Water

A consequence of inadequate pumping infrastructure and large populations is that water pressure in townships is very low. Each section of the townships is normally one pump per section. The water is used for everything from cleaning clothes, cooking, drinking, bathing, and cleaning the house. Having very little water accessible to each section makes it very hard to get enough water for a day per household.[5]

 
The only water pump in that area of the township

[citation needed]

Electricity

Electrical wires strung along the trees leading to power boxes is an ubiquitous sight in the townships, due to illegal electricity connections. This is dangerous, however every house in the area has a wire coming out of it and every wire is known by their owner in order to fix problems as soon as they arise.[6] Most of the sub-stations are very unsecured to begin with so having so many additional wires coming off of it is very dangerous for the people nearby and the kids playing in the area. The electricity infrastructure has not undergone upgrades because of the government's disinclination to encourage power usage by non-residents.[5][neutrality is disputed]

 
Electricity wires in a township near Cape

Flood risk

Some townships, such as Alexandra and Diepsloot, are built near rivers, and on flood plains. These areas are extremely dense with only tortuous, narrow access, few communal water points and banks of chemical toilets on the peripheries of the settlements. The settlements are beginning to be built in the old tributaries due to the continuing growth of the townships. With the houses in the dried up tributaries is a potential problem when a large storm comes and the tributary starts to fill up with water again or if there is a backup of sewerage coming into the tributary. The houses built in that area are all in danger of being destroyed by natural occurrences. As the area grew the tributaries were piped and a number of concrete aprons and gullies were constructed over the tributary to which the communal water points drain. The gullies were then choked with garbage and the tributaries appear to be substantially blocked but this will not hold off the water for very long if a flood came through.[5] Residents sometimes choose to build on river banks due to overcrowding in the belief that they would provide easy access to water and laundry facilities, however the water is unsuitable for these purposes due to pollution, and they are vulnerable to floods.[citation needed]

Backyard shacks

Backyard shacks are additional units on a plot of land that are rented out by the land owner for additional income. A plot of land designed for a house big enough for one family has turned into a plot of land that holds on average six families instead of one.[5] These structures are illegally built in violation of planning and building codes and strain infrastructure. Governments are loath to act on backyard dwellings, doing to would result in a large-scale displacement of people.[citation needed] A 2001 study of the township called Diepsloot near Johannesburg showed that 24% of the residents lived in brick structures, 43% were in shack areas, and 27% were in backyard shacks.[6]

Education

 
Schoolboy at the Lukhanyo Primary School, Zwelihle Township (Hermanus, South Africa)

Township schools are often overcrowded, and lack adequate infrastructure.[citation needed] There is a high dropout rate of poor youth, particularly around Grade 9.[citation needed][7] Despite government interventions, education outcomes remain skewed, with township students continuing to under-perform.[citation needed] This skewed distribution is mainly attributable to higher and more rapid drop out rates among the poor, rather than to a lack of initial access to schooling.[8] The formerly white schools uniformly produce better results and their governing bodies are able to raise substantial private funds used to get resources that are then unreachable by the rural and township schools which survive on the commitment of their teachers.[8]

Gangs and violence

Gangs are a problem in townships, and children as young as 12 or 13 will begin initiation into a local gang. Some see violence and gangs as a way of life and a culture.[citation needed] The weapon of choice for most is a gun and with easy accessibility anyone is able to get one.[citation needed] It is estimated that out of the 14 million guns in circulation, in South Africa, only four million are registered and licensed to legal gun owners.[9]

Largest townships

Largest townships in South Africa at the time of the 2011 census:

Township Population Neighbouring city/town
Soweto 1,271,628 Johannesburg
Thembisa 463,109 Kempton Park
Katlehong 407,294 Germiston
Umlazi 404,811 Durban
Soshanguve 403,162 Pretoria
Khayelitsha 391,749 Cape Town
Mamelodi 334,577 Pretoria
Mitchells Plain 310,485 Cape Town
Ibhayi 237,799 Port Elizabeth
Sebokeng 218,515 Vanderbijlpark
Mangaung 217,076 Bloemfontein
Philippi 200,603 Cape Town
Ivory Park 184,383 Midrand
Botshabelo 181,712 Bloemfontein
Alexandra 179,624 Sandton
Phoenix 176,989 Durban
KwaMashu 175,663 Durban
Vosloorus 163,216 Boksburg
Mdantsane 154,576 East London
Delft 152,030 Cape Town
Etwatwa 151,866 Benoni
Motherwell, Eastern Cape 140,351 Port Elizabeth
Tsakane 135,994 Brakpan
Thabong 135,613 Welkom
Evaton 132,851 Vanderbijlpark
Daveyton 127,967 Benoni
Ntuzuma 125,394 Durban
Madadeni 119,497 Newcastle
Embalenhle 118,889 Secunda
Kagiso 115,802 Krugersdorp
Mabopane, Gauteng 110,972 Pretoria
Galeshewe 107,920 Kimberley, Northern Cape
KwaNobuhle 107,407 Uitenhage
Saulsville 105,208 City of Tshwane
Jouberton 104,977 Klerksdorp
Thokoza 105,827 Alberton
KwaThema 99,517 Springs
Guguletu 98,468 Cape Town
Diepsloot 95,067 Midrand
Ga-Rankuwa 90,945 Pretoria
Seshego 83,863 Polokwane
Edendale 79,573 Pietermaritzburg
Osizweni 77,845 Newcastle
Orange Farm 76,767 Johannesburg
Hlubi 73,931 Newcastle
Duduza 73,295 Nigel, Gauteng
Mfuleni 52,274 Cape Town
Mpumalanga 62,406 Pinetown
Matsulu 47,306 Mbombela
Thembalethu 43,103 George, Western Cape
Mahwelereng 41,072 Mokopane
Sharpeville 37,599 Vereeniging

Legal meaning

The legal meaning of the term "township" in South Africa differs from the popular usage, and has a precise legal meaning[10][11] without any racial connotations. The term is used in land titles and townships are subdivided into erfs (stands).[12] "Township" can also mean a designated area or district, as part of a place name. For instance "Industrial Township" has been used in reference to an industrial area, e.g. "Westmead Industrial Township", in Pinetown, South Africa.

Often a township (in the legal sense) is established, and then adjoining townships, with the same name as the original township, and with a numbered "Extension" suffix are later established.[citation needed] For example, the Johannesburg suburb of Bryanston has an extension called Bryanston Extension 3.[13]

Relationship with "suburb"

In traditionally or historically white areas, the term "suburb" is used for legally-defined residential townships in everyday conversation.

A suburb's boundaries are often regarded as being the same as the (legal) township boundaries, along with its numbered extensions, and it usually shares its name with the township (with some notable exceptions, such as the Johannesburg suburb known as Rivonia, which is actually the township of Edenburg with numbered extensions called Rivonia Extensions).

Occasionally formerly independent towns, such as Sandton (which itself consists of numerous suburbs), are referred to as "suburbs".[14]

See also

References

  1. ^ Pettman, Charles (1913). Africanderisms; a glossary of South African colloquial words and phrases and of place and other names. Longmans, Green and Co. p. 298.
  2. ^ International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences (PDF). p. 406.
  3. ^ a b c Seekings, Jeremy; Nattrass, Nicoli (2005). "Class, Race, and Inequality in South Africa" (PDF). sahistory.org.za. Yale University Press. p. 63. Retrieved 23 May 2017.
  4. ^ Huchzermeyer, M., (2011).Cities with ‘Slums’: From Informal Settlement Eradication to a Right To The City In Africa University of Cape Town Press, Cape Town
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Interactive Planning Workshop for Johannesburg. Greater Johannesburg Metropolitan Council. Johannesburg, South Africa. 27–30 September 2000. Web. 8 October 2011. <http://web.mit.edu/urbanupgrading/upgrading/case-examples/overview-africa/alexandra-township.html>
  6. ^ a b Harber, Anton. Diepsloot. Jeppestown: Jonathan Ball Publishers LTD, 2011. 2011. 1-226. Print.
  7. ^ . SouthAfrica.info. N.p., n.d. Web. 8 October 2011. Archived from the original on 17 June 2010.
  8. ^ a b Motloung, Hloni. "Township and Rural Schools continue to be marginalized as inequality in the education system persists commented Graeme Bloch, Education Specialist, Development Bank of Southern Africa at the Knowledge Week." n.d. n. page. Print.
  9. ^ "Guns, gangs and culture of violence." BBC News. (2002): n. page. Web. 19 October 2011. <http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/1919382.stm>
  10. ^ Birkett, Richard (August 2003). "The Survey System in South Africa". KZNLS Information Services. from the original on 22 December 2018. Retrieved 21 October 2022. page 3: In an urban area, the basic unit of land is an erf. And page 5: A general plan is registered as a "township" in the Deeds Office and in he case of Durban. Hence the trend now is to frame diagrams for townships that should really be depicted on general plans.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 June 2011. Retrieved 12 November 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. ^ "project management - tenure of land - development - community - south africa". lts.co.za.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 25 July 2012. Retrieved 16 November 2011.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 November 2011. Retrieved 16 November 2011.

External links

township, south, africa, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, township, south, africa, news, newspapers, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Township South Africa news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message In South Africa the terms township and location usually refer to the often underdeveloped racially segregated urban areas that from the late 19th century until the end of apartheid were reserved for non whites namely Black Africans Coloureds and Indians Townships were usually built on the periphery of towns and cities 1 2 The term township also has a distinct legal meaning in South Africa s system of land title which carries no racial connotations The town of Hankey foreground with accompanying township background on the edge of the town Children in a township near Cape Town in 1989 Children in a township near Cape Town Townships for non whites were also called locations or lokasies in Afrikaans and are often still referred to by that name in smaller towns The slang term kasie kasi a popular short version of lokasie is also used Townships sometimes have large informal settlements nearby Contents 1 History 1 1 Early development 1 2 Apartheid 1948 1994 1 3 Post apartheid 2 Social issues 2 1 Infrastructure problems 2 1 1 Sewerage 2 1 2 Water 2 1 3 Electricity 2 2 Flood risk 2 3 Backyard shacks 2 4 Education 2 5 Gangs and violence 3 Largest townships 4 Legal meaning 4 1 Relationship with suburb 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditEarly development Edit During 1900 1950 roughly the majority of the black population in major urban areas lived in hostels or servants accommodations provided by employers and were mostly single men In the period during and following World War II urban areas of South Africa experienced a rapid period of urbanization as the colour bar was relaxed due to the war Neither employers nor the government built new accommodations or homes for the influx of new residents This led to overcrowding poor living conditions and the absence of amenities thereby contributing to high levels of crime and violence High rents and overcrowding led to land invasions and the growth of shack settlements which were largely ignored by government 3 By 1950 a large portion of the urban black population lived in townships In 1950 upwards of 100 000 people were living in townships on the Witwatersrand area 50 000 people in Cato Manor in Durban and an estimated 150 000 black and colored people lived in townships in Cape Town 3 Living conditions in the shack township settlements were low but had the advantage over other more established options in the hostels of being cheap and largely unregulated by the apartheid era South African Police 3 Apartheid 1948 1994 Edit During the era of ideological apartheid black people were evicted from properties that were in areas designated as white only and forced to move into segregated townships Separate townships were established for each of the three designated non white race groups black people Coloureds and Indians as per the Population Registration Act 1950 Legislation that enabled the apartheid government to do this included the Group Areas Act Post apartheid Edit Most South African towns and cities have at least one township associated with them Some old townships have seen rapid development since 1994 with for instance wealthy and middle income areas sprouting in parts of Soweto and Chatsworth Despite their origins in apartheid South Africa today the terms township location and informal settlement are not used pejoratively However policy makers who are when as in the 1950s once again using the term slums in a highly pejorative way 4 Social issues EditThis section s tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia See Wikipedia s guide to writing better articles for suggestions December 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Township communities are faced with several social problems Most often the residents of townships do not own the land on which their houses are built In effect these houses are built illegally 5 Construction is informal and unregulated by the government This results in a lack of access to basic services such as sewerage electricity roads and clean water which adversely affects residents quality of life 5 Infrastructure problems Edit Sewerage water and electrical Infrastructure within townships is often in need of repair resulting in a lack of sanitation due to problems with accessibility and availability Electricity water and sewerage are managed by different government departments resulting in inefficiencies in the absence of substantial co ordination at all stages of the project planning budgeting and implementation cycle 5 Sewerage Edit Khayelitsha Township along N2 road near Cape Town 2015 The sewer systems within townships are poorly planned and constructed citation needed The population of townships typically grows faster than the infrastructure was planned for causing overloads that result in blockages surges and overflows There are often a limited number of public toilets that are over used abused and quickly become health hazards for the communities Another issue is poor access to maintenance activities which is caused by the lack of space between houses Some of the areas on the township peripheries or near riverbanks do not have access to facilities because they are not connected to the formal waterborne sewerage system citation needed Water Edit A consequence of inadequate pumping infrastructure and large populations is that water pressure in townships is very low Each section of the townships is normally one pump per section The water is used for everything from cleaning clothes cooking drinking bathing and cleaning the house Having very little water accessible to each section makes it very hard to get enough water for a day per household 5 The only water pump in that area of the township citation needed Electricity Edit Electrical wires strung along the trees leading to power boxes is an ubiquitous sight in the townships due to illegal electricity connections This is dangerous however every house in the area has a wire coming out of it and every wire is known by their owner in order to fix problems as soon as they arise 6 Most of the sub stations are very unsecured to begin with so having so many additional wires coming off of it is very dangerous for the people nearby and the kids playing in the area The electricity infrastructure has not undergone upgrades because of the government s disinclination to encourage power usage by non residents 5 neutrality is disputed Electricity wires in a township near Cape Flood risk Edit Some townships such as Alexandra and Diepsloot are built near rivers and on flood plains These areas are extremely dense with only tortuous narrow access few communal water points and banks of chemical toilets on the peripheries of the settlements The settlements are beginning to be built in the old tributaries due to the continuing growth of the townships With the houses in the dried up tributaries is a potential problem when a large storm comes and the tributary starts to fill up with water again or if there is a backup of sewerage coming into the tributary The houses built in that area are all in danger of being destroyed by natural occurrences As the area grew the tributaries were piped and a number of concrete aprons and gullies were constructed over the tributary to which the communal water points drain The gullies were then choked with garbage and the tributaries appear to be substantially blocked but this will not hold off the water for very long if a flood came through 5 Residents sometimes choose to build on river banks due to overcrowding in the belief that they would provide easy access to water and laundry facilities however the water is unsuitable for these purposes due to pollution and they are vulnerable to floods citation needed Backyard shacks Edit Backyard shacks are additional units on a plot of land that are rented out by the land owner for additional income A plot of land designed for a house big enough for one family has turned into a plot of land that holds on average six families instead of one 5 These structures are illegally built in violation of planning and building codes and strain infrastructure Governments are loath to act on backyard dwellings doing to would result in a large scale displacement of people citation needed A 2001 study of the township called Diepsloot near Johannesburg showed that 24 of the residents lived in brick structures 43 were in shack areas and 27 were in backyard shacks 6 Education Edit Main article Education in South Africa Schoolboy at the Lukhanyo Primary School Zwelihle Township Hermanus South Africa Township schools are often overcrowded and lack adequate infrastructure citation needed There is a high dropout rate of poor youth particularly around Grade 9 citation needed 7 Despite government interventions education outcomes remain skewed with township students continuing to under perform citation needed This skewed distribution is mainly attributable to higher and more rapid drop out rates among the poor rather than to a lack of initial access to schooling 8 The formerly white schools uniformly produce better results and their governing bodies are able to raise substantial private funds used to get resources that are then unreachable by the rural and township schools which survive on the commitment of their teachers 8 Gangs and violence Edit Gangs are a problem in townships and children as young as 12 or 13 will begin initiation into a local gang Some see violence and gangs as a way of life and a culture citation needed The weapon of choice for most is a gun and with easy accessibility anyone is able to get one citation needed It is estimated that out of the 14 million guns in circulation in South Africa only four million are registered and licensed to legal gun owners 9 Largest townships EditLargest townships in South Africa at the time of the 2011 census Township Population Neighbouring city townSoweto 1 271 628 JohannesburgThembisa 463 109 Kempton ParkKatlehong 407 294 GermistonUmlazi 404 811 DurbanSoshanguve 403 162 PretoriaKhayelitsha 391 749 Cape TownMamelodi 334 577 PretoriaMitchells Plain 310 485 Cape TownIbhayi 237 799 Port ElizabethSebokeng 218 515 VanderbijlparkMangaung 217 076 BloemfonteinPhilippi 200 603 Cape TownIvory Park 184 383 MidrandBotshabelo 181 712 BloemfonteinAlexandra 179 624 SandtonPhoenix 176 989 DurbanKwaMashu 175 663 DurbanVosloorus 163 216 BoksburgMdantsane 154 576 East LondonDelft 152 030 Cape TownEtwatwa 151 866 BenoniMotherwell Eastern Cape 140 351 Port ElizabethTsakane 135 994 BrakpanThabong 135 613 WelkomEvaton 132 851 VanderbijlparkDaveyton 127 967 BenoniNtuzuma 125 394 DurbanMadadeni 119 497 NewcastleEmbalenhle 118 889 SecundaKagiso 115 802 KrugersdorpMabopane Gauteng 110 972 PretoriaGaleshewe 107 920 Kimberley Northern CapeKwaNobuhle 107 407 UitenhageSaulsville 105 208 City of TshwaneJouberton 104 977 KlerksdorpThokoza 105 827 AlbertonKwaThema 99 517 SpringsGuguletu 98 468 Cape TownDiepsloot 95 067 MidrandGa Rankuwa 90 945 PretoriaSeshego 83 863 PolokwaneEdendale 79 573 PietermaritzburgOsizweni 77 845 NewcastleOrange Farm 76 767 JohannesburgHlubi 73 931 NewcastleDuduza 73 295 Nigel GautengMfuleni 52 274 Cape TownMpumalanga 62 406 PinetownMatsulu 47 306 MbombelaThembalethu 43 103 George Western CapeMahwelereng 41 072 MokopaneSharpeville 37 599 Vereeniging Construction of a house in the former township Dukathole near Aliwal North A bigger shack made of corrugated iron within Dukathole Little shop on the main street of Dukathole Dukathole Street sceneLegal meaning EditFurther information Erf law and South African property law The legal meaning of the term township in South Africa differs from the popular usage and has a precise legal meaning 10 11 without any racial connotations The term is used in land titles and townships are subdivided into erfs stands 12 Township can also mean a designated area or district as part of a place name For instance Industrial Township has been used in reference to an industrial area e g Westmead Industrial Township in Pinetown South Africa Often a township in the legal sense is established and then adjoining townships with the same name as the original township and with a numbered Extension suffix are later established citation needed For example the Johannesburg suburb of Bryanston has an extension called Bryanston Extension 3 13 Relationship with suburb Edit In traditionally or historically white areas the term suburb is used for legally defined residential townships in everyday conversation A suburb s boundaries are often regarded as being the same as the legal township boundaries along with its numbered extensions and it usually shares its name with the township with some notable exceptions such as the Johannesburg suburb known as Rivonia which is actually the township of Edenburg with numbered extensions called Rivonia Extensions Occasionally formerly independent towns such as Sandton which itself consists of numerous suburbs are referred to as suburbs 14 See also EditList of townships in South Africa HIV AIDS in South African townships Bantustan Ghetto Racial segregation Township tourism Old Location a township of Windhoek Namibia Katutura a township of Windhoek NamibiaReferences Edit Pettman Charles 1913 Africanderisms a glossary of South African colloquial words and phrases and of place and other names Longmans Green and Co p 298 International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences PDF p 406 a b c Seekings Jeremy Nattrass Nicoli 2005 Class Race and Inequality in South Africa PDF sahistory org za Yale University Press p 63 Retrieved 23 May 2017 Huchzermeyer M 2011 Cities with Slums From Informal Settlement Eradication to a Right To The City In Africa University of Cape Town Press Cape Town a b c d e f g Interactive Planning Workshop for Johannesburg Greater Johannesburg Metropolitan Council Johannesburg South Africa 27 30 September 2000 Web 8 October 2011 lt http web mit edu urbanupgrading upgrading case examples overview africa alexandra township html gt a b Harber Anton Diepsloot Jeppestown Jonathan Ball Publishers LTD 2011 2011 1 226 Print Education in South Africa SouthAfrica info N p n d Web 8 October 2011 Archived from the original on 17 June 2010 a b Motloung Hloni Township and Rural Schools continue to be marginalized as inequality in the education system persists commented Graeme Bloch Education Specialist Development Bank of Southern Africa at the Knowledge Week n d n page Print Guns gangs and culture of violence BBC News 2002 n page Web 19 October 2011 lt http news bbc co uk 2 hi africa 1919382 stm gt Birkett Richard August 2003 The Survey System in South Africa KZNLS Information Services Archived from the original on 22 December 2018 Retrieved 21 October 2022 page 3 In an urban area the basic unit of land is an erf And page 5 A general plan is registered as a township in the Deeds Office and in he case of Durban Hence the trend now is to frame diagrams for townships that should really be depicted on general plans Archived copy Archived from the original on 29 June 2011 Retrieved 12 November 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link project management tenure of land development community south africa lts co za Alien spotted in Bryanston Extension 3 Municipal looklocal Randburg Archived from the original on 25 July 2012 Retrieved 16 November 2011 Title deeds handed over in Alex Alexandra Archived from the original on 23 November 2011 Retrieved 16 November 2011 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Slums in South Africa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Township South Africa amp oldid 1140079423, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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