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14 - South Africa's Water Law and Policy Framework: Implications for the Right to Water

from IV - Environment and Human Rights

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 October 2011

Alix Gowlland-Gualtieri
Affiliation:
University of Geneva
Philippe Cullet
Affiliation:
School of Oriental and African Studeis, University of London
Alix Gowlland-Gualtieri
Affiliation:
School of Oriental and African Studeis, University of London
Roopa Madhav
Affiliation:
School of Oriental and African Studeis, University of London
Usha Ramanathan
Affiliation:
School of Oriental and African Studeis, University of London
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Summary

Introduction

The post-apartheid reforms in South Africa which put into place the existing water framework were intended to redress the disparities inherited from the prior racial segregation policies. Apartheid had entrenched stark inequalities between black and white communities also in the face of access to water, while the natural scarcity of national freshwater resources in South Africa also contributes to diminishing availability of water and increasing competition between the various users. Consequently, water reform policy and water justice became a central aspect of the new Government's policy of reconstruction and development and indeed remain very topical issues today. The right to water was entrenched in the constitution adopted in 1996 and in subsequent legislation, and its implementation was furthered a few years later by means of a policy of ‘free basic water’ adopted by the government.

The South Africa experience is interesting in that it sheds light on developments taking place in the context of renewed interest for the formalisation of a right to water in international law as well as in the national legal orders of a growing number of countries. While on the one hand the implementation of the right has resulted in the development of a policy of free entitlement to water for consumption and domestic use, there remain in South Africa huge disparities in access to basic water services and allocation of water, mostly as a legacy from the apartheid regime but also as the result of the application of an essentially economic approach to water policy.

Type
Chapter
Information
Water Governance in Motion
Towards Socially and Environmentally Sustainable Water Laws
, pp. 388 - 414
Publisher: Foundation Books
Print publication year: 2010

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