More explicit regional policy for South Africa, please Mr President
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Date
Authors
Drewes, Ernst
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Department of Urban and Regional Planning, University of the Free State
Abstract
Showing abstract in English
English: South Africa has a long and well-documented history with regard to the design and
implementation of national development and regional policy. With the first official
policy initiatives in the 1960s, it was decided by the then National Party that a policy
of separate development (apartheid) of ethnic groups had to be implemented in the
national space economy. In this sense, there is no doubt about the explicit nature of
this policy, as it had very specific spatial objectives and implications from the national
level down to neighbourhood level. With the democratisation of the Government
in 1994, this negative policy connotation led to the establishment of numerous
spatial development policies without any significant ‘spatial’ application. At the
moment, however, numerous national government departments implement spatial
investment programmes on a spatially explicit basis, with little coordination between
these spheres and sectors of government. Research has shown that, on a global
level, national and regional development policy increasingly has to be focused on a
selected number of cities with inherent economic agglomeration benefits. This article
aims to provide a scientifically based perspective on what the policy approach of the
Presidency’s envisaged National Spatial Framework (RSA, 2012) should include,
i.e., an explicit and spatially selective approach focused on cities with existing
agglomeration economies.
Description
Citation
Drewes, E. More explicit regional policy for South Africa, please Mr President. Town and Regional Planning, 67(1), 58-67.