PUB1601
ASSIGNMENT 2
DUE DATE: APRIL 2026
, PUB1601
ASSIGNMENT 2 2026 MEMO
DUE APRIL 2026
Question:
Discuss the impact of apartheid-era legislation on the spatial planning and human
settlement patterns in South Africa. In your answer, refer to at least two key laws and
explain how they continue to influence post-apartheid housing challenges.
A NSWER
Apartheid-era legislation deliberately shaped South Africa’s spatial planning and human
settlement patterns in a way that benefited a white minority while marginalising the majority of
the population. Laws regulating land ownership, residential location, and movement were used
as political tools to enforce racial segregation and economic exclusion. As a result, cities and
towns developed in a fragmented manner, with wellserviced urban cores reserved for white
citizens and underdeveloped townships and rural homelands allocated to black South Africans.
Although apartheid officially ended in 1994, the spatial legacy of these laws continues to
influence housing delivery, access to land, and settlement patterns today. The impact of
apartheid-era legislation on spatial planning and human settlements is evident when examining
the Natives Land Act of 1913 and the Group Areas Act of 1950, whose effects continue to shape
post-apartheid housing challenges within the legislative and policy framework outlined in
(Learning Unit 2 of the PUB1602 study guide).
ASSIGNMENT 2
DUE DATE: APRIL 2026
, PUB1601
ASSIGNMENT 2 2026 MEMO
DUE APRIL 2026
Question:
Discuss the impact of apartheid-era legislation on the spatial planning and human
settlement patterns in South Africa. In your answer, refer to at least two key laws and
explain how they continue to influence post-apartheid housing challenges.
A NSWER
Apartheid-era legislation deliberately shaped South Africa’s spatial planning and human
settlement patterns in a way that benefited a white minority while marginalising the majority of
the population. Laws regulating land ownership, residential location, and movement were used
as political tools to enforce racial segregation and economic exclusion. As a result, cities and
towns developed in a fragmented manner, with wellserviced urban cores reserved for white
citizens and underdeveloped townships and rural homelands allocated to black South Africans.
Although apartheid officially ended in 1994, the spatial legacy of these laws continues to
influence housing delivery, access to land, and settlement patterns today. The impact of
apartheid-era legislation on spatial planning and human settlements is evident when examining
the Natives Land Act of 1913 and the Group Areas Act of 1950, whose effects continue to shape
post-apartheid housing challenges within the legislative and policy framework outlined in
(Learning Unit 2 of the PUB1602 study guide).