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The land act had set aside 13% of agricultural land for the indigenous people. However, initially they were only given about 7%. It took them 23 years of fighting to receive the other 6%. Prior to the act, the indigenous people of South Africa had owned majority of the farmland which was annexed, bought or handed over to the white colonists.
This ordinance stipulated that the reserve land, which the black population in the Natives Land Act, 1913 had been allocated to 7.13% (9,709,586 acres (3,929,330 ha)) of the total land, be enlarged to approximately 13.6% of the total area of then South Africa. This value was not reached and remained so unfulfilled until the 1980s.
Native Trust and Land Amendment Act, 1939 (before 1964) Bantu Trust and Land Amendment Act, 1939 (from 1964 to 1978) Development Trust and Land Amendment Act, 1939 (after 1978) 18: Children's (Amendment) Act, 1939: 19: Police (South-West Africa) Act, 1939: 20: Electrical Wiremen and Contractors Act, 1939: 21: Higher Education (Amendment) Act ...
After the groundwork laid by the Land Act 1913 and the Group Areas Act 1950, Bantustans or ‘homelands’ for black South Africans at the end of apartheid were very small and economically deprived. In 1910, the Union of South Africa Act united the post Boer War British and Afrikaner communities, but excluded black South Africans from political ...
The Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act (PIE) [1] is an act of the Parliament of South Africa which came into effect on 5 June, 1998, and which sets out to prevent arbitrary evictions.
Land Bank Amendment Act, 1959: 48: South Africa Act Further Amendment Act, 1959: 49: Offices of Profit Amendment Act, 1959: 50: Hire-Purchase Amendment Act, 1959: 51: Mines and Works Amendment Act, 1959: 52: Stamp Duties and Fees Amendment Act, 1959: 53: Railway Construction Act, 1959: 54: Suid-Afrikaanse Akademie vir Wetenskap en Kuns Act ...
South Africa is generally considered to have had five constitutional documents since the Union was established in 1910, including the current one. The constitutions in chronological order are: South Africa Act 1909; Constitution of South Africa, 1961 (also known as the "Republican Constitution")
This is a list of acts of the Parliament of South Africa enacted in the years 1910 to 1919. South African acts are uniquely identified by the year of passage and an act number within that year. Some acts have gone by more than one short title in the course of their existence; in such cases each title is listed with the years in which it applied.