Original Research - Special Collection: HTS 75th Anniversary Maake Masango Dedication

Land and identity in South Africa: An immanent moral critique of dominant discourses in the debate on expropriation without compensation

Nico Vorster
HTS Teologiese Studies / Theological Studies | Vol 75, No 4 | a5290 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/hts.v75i4.5290 | © 2019 Nico Vorster | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 19 October 2018 | Published: 12 March 2019

About the author(s)

Nico Vorster, Faculty of Theology, North-West University, Potchefstroom, South Africa

Abstract

Ownership is an important identity marker. It provides people with a sense of autonomy, rootedness and opportunity. This essay examines the oral submissions of civil organisations to the Joint Constitutional Review Committee (04–07 September 2018) about the issue of land expropriation without compensation. The discussion pays specific attention to the philosophical understandings of land and identity that emerged during the hearings. Three dominant trajectories came into play, namely land as commodity, land as social space and land as spiritual inheritance. Some submissions espoused more than one view, which indicates that the boundaries between the identified paradigms are permeable. However, even those presentations tended to prioritise one approach above the others. Besides identifying the main approaches to land and identity, this essay also provides an immanent critique of their moral assumptions. In contrast to a transcendental approach, an immanent critique asks questions from ‘within’ and evaluates paradigms in terms of their plausibility, universal applicability, ethical consistency and moral integrity.

Keywords

lnd; identity; expropriation without compensation; morality

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