Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/4325
Title: The role of the habitat policy agenda in addressing urban planning challenges in South Africa : a case study of the city of Johannesburg
Authors: Chemane, Mbalenhle Samantha 
Keywords: City of Johannesburg;Habitat III;New urban agenda;Urbanisation;Urban challenges
Issue Date: 13-May-2022
Abstract: 
Urbanization is a worldwide phenomenon that has gained traction into becoming the most
significant megatrend of the 21st century, making cities the focus of most of the world’s
development challenges. The United Nations predicts that by 2050, African cities will be home
to 2.5 billion people (60% of the population), double the number in 2015 of approximately 1.23
billion people. The global south and African cities are experiencing the most rapid urbanisation
rates and cities in South Africa are not indemnified. The City of Johannesburg, like the rest of
the world, is facing a rapidly growing population. As it stands Johannesburg is South Africa’s
largest city with an urban population of 99.8% and it is predicted that by 2040 four in five
people could be living in urban areas. The history of South Africa however, had not prepared
for this rate of urban population growth. Colonialist and apartheid planning produced highly
inefficient, inequitable, and environmentally damaging outcomes to the spatial landscape of
the city and left the city’s urban areas with vast urban planning challenges. These include
spatial segregation, urban sprawl, lack of affordable quality housing, and inadequate
infrastructure and services, inter alia.
To address these glaring urban issues, the City of Johannesburg has recently embraced the
Habitat III: New Urban Agenda. This policy is the third-generation document of the Habitat
Agenda Policy which seeks to create a mutually reinforcing relationship between urbanization
and development. It intends on reinvigorating the global commitment to sustainable
urbanisation and making cities and human settlements equitable, prosperous, sustainable,
and safe.
Against this backdrop, this research study is aimed at establishing what feasible strategies
and policy guidelines the Habitat III: New Urban Agenda can provide to reduce the
urbanisation crisis and promote sustainable urban development in the City of Johannesburg.
The research study uses the City of Johannesburg as a case study and takes on both
qualitative and quantitative approaches as it has many dimensions and layers which are
portrayed in its multifaceted form.
The analysis revealed that the strategies, projects, and programmes developed by the City of
Johannesburg to address urban planning challenges experienced by the city, are overall well
aligned to the principles of the New Urban Agenda. What is not translated well is the detail
stipulated in the sub-themes of the five pillars outlined by the New Urban Agenda, which
exposes a gap within the urban legislation, urban economy, municipal finance, and local
implementation of the city. This directly contributes to the slow pace and unrealised potential
of sustainable urban development within the city. The study recommends, inter alia, that the
city places more resources on implementation of instruments prescribed by the descriptions
in the sub-themes of the Action Implementation Framework of the New Urban Agenda and
prioritise the four pillars of sustainability by incorporating the institutional and environmental
pillars more strongly in plans and project. This will enable Johannesburg to better realise
sustainable urban development.
Description: 
Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements of Master of Built Environment in Town and Regional Planning, Durban University of Technology, 2021.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/4325
DOI: https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/4325
Appears in Collections:Theses and dissertations (Engineering and Built Environment)

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