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Property and "Human Flourishing": A Reassessment in the Housing Framework


Sue-Mari Viljoen

Abstract

In South Africa, land/housing is a finite non-shareable type of
property that must yield to stringent constitutional control to meet land reform and housing objectives, which is high on our constitutional agenda to redress injustices of the past and allow the previously dispossessed to take their rightful place in society. This article considers the normative framework that underlies the types of property that must be regulated for the purposes of section 25 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, since very few cases have been decided in such a way as to consider, from a normative perspective when land/housing should be subject to greater governmental control and when not. Even in the context of expropriation without compensation, certain types of land/buildings are being flagged for this purpose, but the normative reasons for such propositions remain unclear.
The purpose of this article is to offer a theoretical perspective,
based on work done by progressive-property scholars, on the
normative foundation of some property rights, with the object of initiating a dialogue concerning whether or not such rights
should be regulated. The notion of human flourishing, as
developed by Alexander, should arguably be essential in
determining whether land/housing rights should be subject to greater constitutional scrutiny; the more property contributes to the individual's autonomy and ability to partake in social relations, the more sceptical we should be of severe governmental interference; whereas the lesser the notion of human flourishing appears, the greater governmental interference should be. An approach of this kind adheres to the systemic purpose of section 25 of the Constitution, because the property clause is intended to regulate established rights just as much as it is intended to meet certain societal needs.
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eISSN: 1727-3781