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The 6th KU-TUFS Seminar with Dr. Horman Chitonge

Mon., July 9, 2018 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm

Center for African Area Studies (CAAS), Kyoto University and African Studies Centre, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies (ASC - TUFS) will jointly hold the 6th KU-TUFS Seminar on July 9th, 2018.

ASC - TUFS will invite Dr. Horman Chitonge, a professor of University of Cape Town, to Japan as a visiting professor from June 26th to July 14th, 2018. Then, he will give a lecture about land restitution in South Africa at Kyoto University.

◆Speaker: Dr. Horman Chitonge (Professor, Centre for African Studies, University of Cape Town; Visiting Professor of African Studies Center, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies)

◆Time & Date: 5:00 - 6:30 pm, July 9th, 2018 (Monday)

◆Venue: Conference Room I (#330), 3rd Floor, Inamori Foundation Building, Kyoto University

◆Title: Land Restitution in South Africa: The Post-settlement Dynamics and the Re-opening of Land Claims

◆Abstract:
The South African Government, re-opened the lodgement of land restitution claims in 2014, marking the beginning of phase II of the land restitution programme. The lodgement of land claims for Phase I began in 1994 and closed at the end of 1998. But there has been widespread scepticism about the re-opening of the claims, with critics citing the fact that many rural claims (20 952 claims, representing 25% of the total) which were lodged during the first Phase have actually not yet been settled, and that, even those which have been settled, in over 50% of the settled claims, land has not been formally transferred. While the media and other commentators have focused on questioning the reasoning behind the re-opening of the land claims, little attention has been given to what happens after the land claim is successfully settled. This paper examines the post-settlement dynamics, especially settlement claims involving the restoration of land. The paper argues that there are many challenges facing claimants post-settlement, and most of these challenges relate to the process of settling the claims. The paper draws from a study conducted in the Eastern Cape Province in 2014.

◆Jointly sponsored by Center for African Area Studies, Kyoto University and African Studies Centre - Tokyo University of Foreign Studies