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Homelessness in South Africa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

People sleeping in theCompany's Garden, inCape Town

Homelessness inSouth Africa dates back to theapartheid period.[1] Increasingunemployment, lack ofaffordable housing, social disintegration, and social and economic policies have all been identified as contributing factors to the issue.[2]

Somescholars argue that solutions to homelessness in South Africa lie more within the private sphere than in the legal and political spheres.[3]

There is no national census on homeless people in South Africa;researchers instead rely on individual studies of homeless persons in particular cities.[4]

In 2022, the South African homeless population was reported byStatistics South Africa (Stats SA) to comprise a total of 55,719 individuals.[5]

One study found that three-quarters of South Africanmetropolitan municipalities viewed homelessness primarily as a social dependency issue and responded with social interventions. At the same time, homeless South Africans indicated that the most important assistance the municipality could provide was employment and well-located, affordable housing.[6]

History

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Early history through the 1800s

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In the 19th century, the main issues facing the colonies were squatting and vagrancy, as white settlers took much of the land for farming. In the mid-19th century, under colonial rule, efforts were made to remove non-white people from white-owned property, causing the displacement of a large wandering population looking for work.[7]

The introduction of Cape's Vagrancy and Squatting Act (1878) and other legislation enacted by the colonies were intended to change the status of vagrants or wanders living on the land from a status of vagrancy to residential labour, to prevent the crime risks associated with the wandering population.[7]

Apartheid period

[edit]

During the apartheid period, racial segregation and anti-black policies were used to preserve white rule of the country.[8] Zoning laws controlled movement and places of residence for black people, forcing them into black townships in the white-ruled cities.[9] Visible homelessness was not allowed on the streets, so those who were homeless due to apartheid policies moved into shack settlements.[7]

The Natives Land Act 1913, known as the Black Land Act, legalised racial distinctions that denied rural black farmers access to land.[10] Formed forced 'scheduled areas' that prevented the buying and selling of land to make any profit. It encouraged segregation, controlled movement, and spatially segregated residence within urban areas, and expanded throughout the apartheid.[11]

From this piece of legislation, more policies and legislation of racial segregation were enacted, limiting areas for blacks to live, forcing them into townships. The Native Land Act was the first piece of legislation to enforce territorial segregation and was the beginning of racial segregation in institutionalising it into South African legislation.[12]

Homeless person trying to make a living through music in Cape Town, South Africa

In 1927, the first township, Langa, was founded in Cape Town. In the 1950s, the townships of Nyanga and Guglethu were developed and expanded.[13]

Severe housing shortages in 1968 led to overcrowding, and people constructed informal, illegal settlements throughout the cities.[13]

Causes

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Homelessness is shaped by social and economic insecurity, which is worsened by informal housing and a lack of legislation by the government.[14] Financial pressure put on those living on the street is worsened as they cannot accumulate wealth, unlike the population living in shacks.[7]

Unemployment is known to contribute to homelessness.[15] South Africa has seen an improvement in its unemployment rate, with the national average dropping from 36.2% in 2014[16] to 31.9% in 2025.[17]

The South African economy is growing; according to Statistics South Africa, it expanded by 0.6% in the fourth quarter of 2024. Growth was driven by agriculture, finance, and trade on the supply (production) side of the economy. Household spending led growth on the demand (expenditure) side.[18]

Homeless person collecting recyclables inStellenbosch, South Africa

High rates of migration into urban areas, whereby the government is unable to cope with the influx.[19] Post-apartheid, free movement of non-white South Africans into areas that were restricted to them, resulting in not enough employment opportunities available.[20]

Prevalence

[edit]

Demographics

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The2022 national census found that there were 55,719 homeless people in the country and that themetropolitan municipality with the largest proportion of South Africa's homeless population wasTshwane with 18.1% of all homeless people.[21]

Other municipalities with a significant share of the country's homeless population wereThe City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (15.6%),The City of Cape Town (11.9%), andeThekwini Metropolitan Municipality (10.1%).[21]Gauteng province had the largest number of homeless people with 25,384 recorded individuals, and theWestern Cape had the second largest homeless population with a total of 9,743 recorded individuals.[21]

Share of South African Homeless Population Across Major South African Cities (2022 Census)
CityPercentage
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality18.1%
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality15.6%
City of Cape Town11.9%
eThekwini Metropolitan Municipality10.1%

Those living on the streets are typically children or single adults, not families.[22] The street homeless population is predominantly black and male.[22] There is a higher prevalence of men on the street, while amongst those living in shacks, there is a larger female population. A profile of homeless people in Cape Town found that there were three times more males than females living in homeless shelters.[23]

In 2004,rural areas had a higher proportion of homeless individuals than cities, whereby a larger percentage of the rural population was poorer than in metropolitan areas.[24]

The 2022 census showed that there was far more homelessness in non-metro areas than in metro regions. The rate of homelessness in non-metro areas was 25.9% - multiple times higher than in many of South Africa's major metropolitan areas.[25]

Street Children

[edit]

Significant migration ofstreet children across borders into South Africa comes initially from other bordering countries such as Zimbabwe. This migration occurrence is an increasing situation facing homeless children.[22]  

A high percentage also comes from urban townships, compared with the higher rate of adults from rural areas. They are forced to leave as there are not enough resources to support them in poverty-stricken living spaces.[26]

Street Children suffer physical and psychological abuse and often develop asubstance use disorder.[27]

Advocacy response

[edit]

'Surfers, Not Street Children' is anadvocacy group based inDurban, established to teach street children to surf to foster connectedness. It aims to help them with psychological issues caused by difficult childhoods.[28]

NGO initiatives

[edit]

Numerousnon-profits have addressed homelessness in South Africa through various methods.

InCape Town, The Service Dining Rooms is an NGO that provides warm meals to the city's homeless population. InCape Town CBD, the NGO operates a center that serves meals each weekday forR2. SDR, which relies entirely on public funding, owns the building in which it operates and has operated since 1935.[29]

National government initiatives

[edit]

There is no specific governmental policy to protect people experiencing homelessness. A 2003 report found that there was no direct national housing plan for people who lived on the streets, but that policy fell predominantly under the Housing and Social Welfare sectors.[14]

Public spending has been directed toward supportingshelters for people experiencing homelessness; however, it is only remedial and not a long-term solution.[26]

In 1994, following the end of apartheid, the newly established Department of Housing aimed to provide 1 million public houses over the following five years. To help alleviate homelessness, the provision of shelter to transition into more permanent living space was implemented by the Department of Housing as a result of the 1994 White Paper on a New Housing and Policy Strategy for South Africa.[14]

Thesocial democraticANCgovernment of South Africa's first President,Nelson Mandela, implemented the Reconstruction and Development Programme (RDP), a socio-economic policy, which oversaw many significant advances in dealing with South Africa's most severe social problems, including those of inadequate and improper housing (created by the apartheid regime'surban apartheid system, including actions taken under theGroup Areas Act.[30]

Affordable housing in South Africa is driven by initiatives at the national, provincial, and local levels of government.

Local government initiatives

[edit]

Cape Town

[edit]

Through its Rough Sleeper initiative, theCity of Cape Town partners with localhomeless shelters to provide safe beds for individuals in need. In mid-2025, it was reported that the initiative had helped 5,000 individuals leave the streets.[31]

The program also offers aid to fightsubstance abuse issues, obtain ID documents andsocial grants, and provide meals and personal development planning. It is also centered around reuniting families. The City partners with shelters across the metro to provide these services.[31]

Social Welfare

[edit]

South Africa has one of the most extensivesocial welfare systems among the world'sdeveloping countries.[32] In 2019, an estimated 18 million people in South Africa received some form of social grant provided by the government.[33]

Literature

[edit]

Child homelessness in South Africa has been portrayed in the novelThirteen Cents byK. Sello Duiker.[34]

Homelessness in South African cities has been portrayed in art in a controversial piece titledBirds in a Cornfield.[35]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Olufemi, Olusola (1998). "Street homelessness in Johannesburg inner-city: A preliminary survey".Environment and Urbanization.10 (2):223–234.doi:10.1177/095624789801000210.S2CID 55973607.
  2. ^Mji, G. (2006). "Disability and homelessness: a personal journey from the margins to the centreand back". In Watermeyer B; Swaartz L; Lorenzo T; Schneider M; Priestley M (eds.).Disability and Social Change: A South African Agenda. South Africa: Human Sciences Research Council. pp. 350–360.
  3. ^Nussbaum, Martha (1 September 2002)."Introduction to Comparative Constitutionalism".Chicago Journal of International Law.3 (2):429–434.
  4. ^Speak, Suzanne (2005). "Relationship Between Children's Homelessness in Developing Countries and the Failure of Women's Rights Legislation".Housing, Theory and Society.22 (3):129–146.doi:10.1080/14036090510034581.S2CID 154844071.
  5. ^"Homelessness in South Africa Grows Amid Ongoing Social Challenges". Stats SA. 6 March 2025. Retrieved4 May 2025.
  6. ^Du Toit, Jacques Louis (2010). "Local metropolitan government responses to homelessness in South Africa".Development Southern Africa.27:111–128.doi:10.1080/03768350903519390.hdl:2263/14765.S2CID 218526847.
  7. ^abcdCross, Catherine; Seager, John; Erasmus, Johan; Ward, Cathy; O'Donovan, Michael (2010). "Skeletons at the feast: A review of street homelessness in South Africa and other world regions".Development Southern Africa.27 (1):5–20.doi:10.1080/03768350903519291.ISSN 0376-835X.S2CID 154893800.
  8. ^Olzak, Susan; Olivier, Johan L. (1998)."Racial Conflict and Protest in South Africa and the United States".European Sociological Review.14 (3):255–278.doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.esr.a018239.ISSN 0266-7215.JSTOR 522683.
  9. ^Christopher, A. J. (1997-10-01)."Racial land zoning in urban South Africa".Land Use Policy.14 (4):311–323.doi:10.1016/S0264-8377(97)00025-2.ISSN 0264-8377.
  10. ^Banda, Sibo (2006-01-01)."Land Law Reform: A Comparative Analysis of South Africa'S Labour Tenancy Contract and Malawi'S Tenant Worker'S Contract"(PDF).Oxford University Commonwealth Law Journal.6 (2):201–225.doi:10.1080/14729342.2006.11421472.ISSN 1472-9342.S2CID 55574097.
  11. ^Crais, Clifton; McClendon, Thomas V., eds. (2013-11-19).The South Africa Reader: History, Culture, Politics. Duke University Press.doi:10.1215/9780822377450.ISBN 978-0-8223-7745-0.
  12. ^Coles, Catherine (1993-08-01)."Land Reform from Post-Apartheid South Africa".Boston College Environmental Affairs Law Review.20 (4): 699.
  13. ^abInternational perspectives on homelessness. Polakow, Valerie., Guillean, Cindy. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press. 2001. pp. 262–308.ISBN 0-313-00397-1.OCLC 50816760.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  14. ^abcNaidoo, Vinothan (2010). "Government responses to street homelessness in South Africa".Development Southern Africa.27 (1):129–141.doi:10.1080/03768350903519408.hdl:11427/22256.ISSN 0376-835X.S2CID 154566129.
  15. ^Steen, Adam; Mackenzie, David; McCormack, Darcy (2012)."Homelessness and unemployment: Understanding the connection and breaking the cycle"(PDF). Swinburne Institute for Social Research Swinburne University.
  16. ^OECD Economic Outlook, Volume 2018, Issue 2. OECD Economic Outlook. 2018. pp. 187–189.doi:10.1787/eco_outlook-v2018-2-en.ISBN 978-92-64-30872-5.S2CID 239604465. Retrieved2020-06-02.
  17. ^"SA's unemployment rate declines to 31.9%". South African Government News Agency. 18 February 2025. Retrieved4 May 2025.
  18. ^"SA economy grows in the fourth quarter". Stats SA. 4 March 2025. Retrieved5 May 2025.
  19. ^Mangayi, Lukwikilu Credo (2017-05-03). "'Not just numbers!' Homeless people as potential economic contributors in Tshwane".Development Southern Africa.34 (4):450–467.doi:10.1080/0376835x.2017.1310023.ISSN 0376-835X.S2CID 157436731.
  20. ^Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa. (2018)."Informal Settlements and Human Rights in South Africa".
  21. ^abc"Census 2022: Statistical Release"(PDF).statssa.gov.za. 10 October 2023. p. 63. Retrieved12 October 2023.
  22. ^abcKok, Pieter; Cross, Catherine; Roux, Niël (2010). "Towards a demographic profile of the street homeless in South Africa".Development Southern Africa.27 (1):21–37.doi:10.1080/03768350903519309.ISSN 0376-835X.S2CID 154587498.
  23. ^Seager, John R; Tamasane, Tsiliso (2010)."Health and well-being of the homeless in South African cities and towns".Development Southern Africa.27 (1):63–83.doi:10.1080/03768350903519358.ISSN 0376-835X.S2CID 154415856.
  24. ^Swartz, Leon (2004-01-01)."Overview of Poverty Situation and Reduction in South Africa for the Past 10 Years".African Population Studies.19.ISSN 0850-5780.
  25. ^"Census 2022 - Statistical Release"(PDF). Stats SA. Retrieved13 June 2025.
  26. ^abCross, Catherine; Seager, John R (2010). "Towards identifying the causes of South Africa's street homelessness: Some policy recommendations".Development Southern Africa.27 (1):143–158.doi:10.1080/03768350903519416.ISSN 0376-835X.S2CID 155017153.
  27. ^Hills, Frances; Meyer-Weitz, Anna; Asante, Kwaku Oppong (2016)."The lived experiences of street children in Durban, South Africa: Violence, substance use, and resilience".International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being.11 (1) 30302.doi:10.3402/qhw.v11.30302.ISSN 1748-2631.PMC 4904070.PMID 27291160.
  28. ^"Waving not drowning: the street children finding refuge in Durban's surf scene".The Guardian. 2019-10-21.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved2020-06-02.
  29. ^Matthew Hirsch (4 July 2025)."'This gives us dignity': The R2 meal that's a lifeline in Cape Town". Times Live. Retrieved6 July 2025.
  30. ^"DHS FAQ". The Department of Human Settlements. Retrieved5 May 2025.
  31. ^abCailynn Pretorius (3 August 2025)."City of Cape Town helps the homeless to get off the streets". EWN. Retrieved4 August 2025.
  32. ^Goldblatt, Beth (November 2005)."Gender and social assistance in the first decade of democracy: A case study of South Africa's Child Support Grant".Politikon.32 (2):239–257.doi:10.1080/02589340500353581.ISSN 0258-9346.S2CID 145625059.
  33. ^Magubane, Khulekani."SA grants system on par with the world's best, says dept of social development".Fin24. Retrieved28 April 2022.
  34. ^Pucherova, Dobrota (2009). "Re-Imagining the Other: The Politics of Friendship in Three Twenty-First Century South African Novels".Journal of Southern African Studies.35 (4):929–943.doi:10.1080/03057070903314218.JSTOR 40600038.S2CID 144445871.
  35. ^Atwater, Deborah F.; Herndon, Sandra L. (2003). "The use of public space as cultural communicator: How museums reconstruct and reconnect cultural memory". In Ronald L. Jackson II; Elaine B. Richardson (eds.).Understanding African American Rhetoric: Classical Origins to Contemporary Innovations. New York: Routledge. p. 69.
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