Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-03T00:44:44.278Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

One Hundred Years of Separation: The Historical Ecology of a South African ‘Coloured Reserve’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 May 2011

Abstract

During the twentieth century, the 20,000 hectares commons surrounding the village of Paulshoek as well as the neighbouring privately-owned farms have been significantly influenced by evolving land-use practices driven largely by socio-economic and political change in the broader Namaqualand and South African region. Land-use practices in the communal lands of Namaqualand were based initially on transhumant pastoralism, then on extensive dryland cropping associated with livestock production under restricted mobility, and more recently on a sedentarized labour reserve where agricultural production now forms a minor part of the local economy. For the first half of the twentieth century, farmers on communal and privately-owned farms shared similar transhumant pastoral practices and both moved across unfenced farm boundaries. By the middle of the century, however, fence-lines were established and commercial farming on privately-owned farms was increasingly managed according to rangeland science principles. As the population grew in the communal areas, families gravitated to new ‘service’ villages such as Paulshoek and became increasingly dependent on migrant labour and state welfare. While the majority of former croplands are now fallow, many of them for decades or more, communal livestock populations have remained relatively high, fluctuating with rainfall. The impact of this history of land use can be compared with that of neighbouring privately-owned farms where low stocking rates, coupled with a variety of state subsidies, have had a very different environmental outcome. This article charts the environmental transformations that have occurred in the area of Paulshoek as a direct result of the region's political history and the evolution of the regional economy. We present a variety of evidence drawn from archival sources, oral history, repeat aerial and ground photography, and detailed climate, cropping and livestock records to show that events far beyond the borders of Namaqualand's communal areas have had a profound influence on their environments.

Au cours du vingtième siècle, les 20,000 hectares de terrains communaux qui entourent le village de Paulshoek, ainsi que les fermes privées environnantes, ont été fortement influencés par l'évolution des pratiques d'utilisation des terres, largement déterminée par les changements socioéconomiques et politiques survenus dans la région du Namaqualand et plus largement en Afrique du Sud. Les pratiques d'utilisation des terres sur les terres communales du Namaqualand reposaient initialement sur le pastoralisme transhumant, puis sur la culture sèche intensive associée à la production de bétail avec mobilité limitée, et plus récemment sur une réserve de main-d'œuvre sédentarisée avec une production agricole qui ne représente plus qu'une faible partie de l'économie locale. Pendant la première moitié du vingtième siècle, les exploitants de terrains communaux et les exploitants de fermes privées avaient des pratiques pastorales transhumantes similaires et tous deux traversaient des terrains non clôturés. Pendant la seconde moitié du siècle, en revanche, les clôtures étaient posées et la gestion de l'activité agricole commerciale dans les fermes privées répondait de plus en plus à des principes de science des pâturages. Au fur et à mesure de l'accroissement de la population dans les zones communales, les familles ont gravité vers les nouveaux 〈villages services〉 comme Paulshoek et leur dépendance vis-à-vis de la main-d'œuvre migrante et de la protection sociale de l'État s'est accrue. Alors que la majorité des terres de culture sont aujourd'hui en jachère, et ce depuis des décennies pour certaines, les populations de bétail communal sont restées relativement élevées, variant selon les précipitations. On peut comparer l'impact de l'histoire de l'utilisation de ces terres avec celui des fermes privées voisines dont la faiblesse des taux d'exploitation du bétail, associée aux subventions publiques diverses, a eu des conséquences très différentes sur l'environnement. Cet article retrace les transformations environnementales survenues dans la région de Paulshoek en conséquence directe de l'histoire politique de la région et de l'évolution de l'économie régionale. À partir de données variées issues d'archives, de l'histoire orale, de photographies aériennes et au sol répétées, ainsi que de registres détaillés du climat, des récoltes et de l'exploitation du bétail, il montre que des événements situés bien au-delà des zones communales du Namaqualand ont eu une influence profonde sur l'environnement.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 2008

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Abrahams, Y. (1999) ‘Who are the people of Paulshoek? Culture and identity in a Namaqualand village’. Unpublished report, National Botanical Institute, Cape Town.Google Scholar
Allsopp, N. (1999) ‘Effects of grazing and cultivation on soil patterns and processes in the Paulshoek areas of Namaqualand’, Plant Ecology 142 (1–2): 179–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anderson, P. M. L. and Hoffman, M. T. (2007) ‘The impacts of sustained heavy grazing on plant diversity and composition in lowland and upland habitats across the Kamiesberg mountain range in the Succulent Karoo’, Journal of Arid Environments 70 (4): 686700.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anseeuw, W. and Laurent, C. (2007) ‘Occupational paths towards commercial agriculture: the key roles of farm pluriactivity and the commons’, Journal of Arid Environments 70 (4): 659–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Archer, F., Hoffman, M. T. and Danckwerts, J. E. (1989) ‘How economic are the farming units of Leliefontein, Namaqualand?’, Journal of the Grassland Society of Southern Africa 6 (4): 211–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Archer, F. and Meer, S. (1998) ‘A woman's work is only recognized when it is not done. Women, land tenure and land reform in Namaqualand's coloured rural areas’. Final report for the Future of Namaqualand Research Project, Surplus People Project, Athlone.Google Scholar
Baker, L. E. and Hoffman, M. T. (2006) ‘Managing variability: herding strategies in communal rangelands of semi-arid Namaqualand, South Africa’, Human Ecology 34 (6): 765–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Balee, W. I. and Erickson, C. L. (2006) Time and Complexity in Historical Ecology: studies in the neotropical lowlands. New York: Columbia University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beinart, W. (1984) ‘Soil erosion, conservation and ideas about development: a Southern African exploration 1900–1960’, Journal of Southern African Studies 11: 5284.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beinart, W. and Coates, P. (1995) Environment and History: the taming of nature in the USA and South Africa. Routledge: London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benjaminsen, T. A., Rohde, R. F., Sjaastad, E., Wisborg, P. and Lebert, T. (2006) ‘Land reform, range ecology, and carrying capacities in Namaqualand, South Africa’, Annals of the Association of American Geographers 96 (3): 224–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boonzaier, E. A., Hoffman, M. T. and Archer, F. M. (1990) ‘Communal land use and the “tragedy of the commons”: some problems and development perspectives with specific reference to semi-arid regions of southern Africa’, Journal of the Grassland Society of Southern Africa 7 (2): 77–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bryceson, D. F. (1996) ‘Deagrarianization and rural employment in sub-Saharan Africa: a sectoral perspective’, World Development 24 (1): 97111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cape Archives (1891) CCP 4/11/1. Cape Town: National Archives and Records Service of South Africa.Google Scholar
Cape Archives (1904) CCP 4/11/5. Cape Town: National Archives and Records Service of South Africa.Google Scholar
Cape Archives (1909) Leliefontein. ACLT 59. Cape Town: National Archives and Records Service of South Africa.Google Scholar
Carstens, P. (1966) The Social Structure of a Cape Coloured Reserve: a study of racial integration and segregation in South Africa. Cape Town: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Carter, M. and May, J. (1998) ‘Poverty, livelihood and class in rural South Africa’, World Development 27 (1): 120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crosby, A. (1986) Ecological Imperialism: the biological expansion of Europe 900–1900. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dahlberg, A. C. and Blaikie, P. (1999) ‘Changes in landscape or in interpretation? Reflections based on the environmental and socio-economic history of a village in NE Botswana’, Environment and History 5: 127–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DBSA (Development Bank of South Africa) (1998) ‘Northern Cape: development profile 1998’. Development Paper 131, Development Business Information Unit.Google Scholar
Dean, W. R. J. and MacDonald, I. A. W. (1994) ‘Historical changes in stocking rates of domestic livestock as a measure of semi-arid and arid rangeland degradation in the Cape Province, South Africa’, Journal of Arid Environments 26 (3): 281.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Debeaudoin, L. (2001) ‘Livestock Farming Practices in a Communal Rangeland, Leliefontein, Namaqualand’. Unpublished MSc thesis, University of the Western Cape.Google Scholar
Eckert, J. (1996) ‘Fifty hectares and freedom; field crop options for small scale farmers in the Western Cape’ in Lipton, M(ichael)., de Klerk, M. and Lipton, M(erle). (eds), Land, Labour and Livelihoods in Rural South Africa. Durban: Indicator Press.Google Scholar
Evans, A. (2001) ‘Analysis of Cooking Shelters in Paulshoek and the Effects of Harvesting on Natural Population of Polymita albiflora’. Unpublished BSc (Honours) thesis, University of Cape Town.Google Scholar
Fairhead, J. and Leach, M. (1996) Misreading the African Landscape: society and ecology in a forest-savanna mosaic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Goldberg, K. (1998) ‘The Impact of Medicinal Plant Harvesting in a Communal Area in Namaqualand, South Africa’. Unpublished BSc (Honours) thesis, University of Cape Town.Google Scholar
Grove, R. (1997) Ecology, Climate and Empire: colonialism and global environmental history 1400–1940. Cambridge: White Horse Press.Google Scholar
Hendricks, F. T. (1997) ‘Antinomies of access: social differentiation and communal tenure in Namaqualand Reserve, South Africa’, East Africa Social Science Research Review 13 (1): 5585.Google Scholar
Hoffman, M. T. and Ashwell, A. (2001) Nature Divided: land degradation in South Africa. Cape Town: UCT Press.Google Scholar
Hoffman, M. T. and Rohde, R. F. (2007) ‘From pastoralism to tourism: the historical impact of changing land use practices in Namaqualand’, Journal of Arid Environments 70 (4): 641–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoffman, M. T., Dean, W. R. J. and Allsopp, N. (2003) ‘Landuse effects on plant and insect diversity in Namaqualand’ in Allsopp, N., Palmer, A. R., Milton, S. J., Kirkman, K. P., Kerley, G. I. H., Hurt, C. R. and Brown, C. J. (eds), Proceedings of the Seventh International Rangelands Congress, Durban, South Africa, 26 July–1 August 2003.Google Scholar
Joubert, D. R. and Ryan, P. G. (1999) ‘Differences in mammal and bird assemblages between commercial and communal rangelands in the Succulent Karoo, South Africa’, Journal of Arid Environments 43 (3): 287–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leach, M. and Mearns, R. (1996) The Lie of the Land: challenging received wisdom on the African environment. Oxford: Portsmouth.Google Scholar
Lebert, T. (2004) ‘What to do with the commons in Namaqualand? Experimenting with co-governance on the new farms of Leliefontein’. PLAAS Occasional Paper, School of Government, University of the Western Cape.Google Scholar
Lebert, T. and Rohde, R. F. (2007) ‘Land reform and the new elite: exclusion of the poor from communal land in Namaqualand, South Africa’, Journal of Arid Environments 70 (4): 818–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leeuwenburg, J. (1972) ‘Leliefontein Communal Reserve, Namaqualand’, in Whisson, M. G. and van der Merve, H. W. (eds), Coloured Citizenship in South Africa: report of the second workshop. The Abe Bailey Institute of Interracial Studies, University of Cape Town.Google Scholar
Marais, J. S. (1968) [1939] The Cape Coloured People 1652–1937. Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press.Google Scholar
May, H. and Lahiff, E. (2007) ‘Land reform in Namaqualand 1994–2005: a review’, Journal of Arid Environments 70 (4): 782–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mayer, C. (2004) ‘Pollination services under different grazing intensities’, International Journal of Tropical Insect Science 24 (1): 95103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCann, J. C. (1999) Green Land, Brown Land, Black Land: an environmental history of Africa, 1800–1990. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
McCusker, B. and Carr, E. R. (2006) ‘The co-production of livelihoods and land use change: case studies from South Africa and Ghana’, Geoforum 37: 790804.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Merchant, C. (1997) ‘The theoretical structure of ecological revolutions’ in Miller, C. and Rohtman, H. (eds), Out of the Woods: essays in environmental history. Pittsburgh PA: University of Pittsburgh Press.Google Scholar
Modiselle, S. (2001) ‘An analysis of functioning of rural households and typology of farming management’. Final project report (draft), Surplus People Project, Cape Town.Google Scholar
Parolin, P. (2001) ‘Seed expulsion in fruits of Mesembryanthemaceae: a mechanistic approach to study the effect of fruit morphological structures on seed dispersal’, Flora 196: 313–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petersen, A., Young, E. M., Hoffman, M. T., Wyn Jones, G. E. and Musil, C. W. (2004) ‘The impact of livestock grazing on landscape biophysical attributes in privately and communally managed rangelands in Namaqualand’, South African Journal of Botany 70 (5): 777–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Price, L. M. (2005) ‘The Impact of Electrification on Household Firewood Consumption in Paulshoek, Namaqualand’. Unpublished BSc (Honours) thesis, University of Cape Town.Google Scholar
Price, W. J. (1976) ‘Leliefontein: structure and decline of a coloured mission community 1870–1913’. BA (Honours) thesis, Department of History, University of Cape Town.Google Scholar
Rajan, R. (2002) ‘The colonial ecodrama: resonant themes in the environmental history of southern Africa and South Asia’ in Dovers, S., Edgecombe, R. and Guest, W. (eds), South Africa's Environmental History: cases and comparisons. Cape Town: David Philip.Google Scholar
Riginos, C. and Hoffman, M. T. (2003) ‘Changes in population biology of two succulent shrubs along a grazing gradient’, Journal of Applied Ecology 40: 615–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rohde, R. F. and Hoffman, M. T. (2005) ‘Paulshoek school leavers' survey report’. Presentation of unpublished research. MAPOSDA final project meeting, Goudini Spa, South Africa, 12 February 2005.Google Scholar
Rohde, R. F., Hoffman, M. T. and Allsopp, N. (2003) ‘Hanging on a wire — a historical and socio-economic study of Paulshoek village in the Leliefontein communal area of Namaqualand’. PLAAS Research Report No. 4, Programme for Land and Agrarian Studies, School of Government, University of the Western Cape.Google Scholar
Rohde, R. F., Hoffman, M. T. and Cousins, B. (1999) ‘Experimenting with the commons — a comparative history of the effects of land policy on pastoralism in two former homelands/reserves, Southern Africa’ in McCarthy, N., Swallow, B., Kirk, M. and Hazell, P. (eds), Property Rights, Risk and Livestock Development. Washington DC: International Livestock Research Institute.Google Scholar
Rohde, R. F., Benjaminsen, T. A. and Hoffman, M. T. (2002) ‘Land reform in Namaqualand: poverty alleviation, stepping stones and economic units’ in Benjaminsen, T., Cousins, B. and Thompson, L. (eds), Contested Resources: challenges to the governance of natural resources in Southern Africa. Bellville: Programme for Land and Agrarian Studies, School of Government, University of the Western Cape.Google Scholar
Rohde, R. F., Moleele, N. M., Mphale, M., Allsopp, N., Chanda, R., Hoffman, M. T., Magole, L. and Young, E. (2006) ‘Dynamics of grazing policy and practice: environmental and social impacts in three communal areas of Southern Africa’, Journal of Environmental Science and Policy 9: 302–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seymour, C. L. and Dean, W. R. J. (1999) ‘Effects of heavy grazing on invertebrate assemblages in the Succulent Karoo, South Africa’, Journal of Arid Environments 43 (3): 267–86.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sharp, J. (1984) ‘Rural development and the struggle against impoverishment in the Namaqualand Reserves’. Carnegie Conference on Poverty and Development, Report No. 68; April 1984, Cape Town.Google Scholar
Sharp, J. and West, M. (1984) ‘Controls and constraints: land, labour and mobility in Namaqualand’. Carnegie Conference on Poverty and Development, Report No. 68; April 1984, Cape Town.Google Scholar
Showers, K. (2005) Soil Erosion and Conservation in Lesotho. Athens OH: Ohio University Press.Google Scholar
Solomon, A. M. (2000) ‘The Use and Valuation of Natural Fuelwood Resources in Paulshoek, Namaqualand and the Ecological Impacts on Rangeland Dynamics’. Unpublished MSc thesis, University of Cape Town.Google Scholar
Stats, SA (2001) ‘South Africa census by sub-place 2001’. Space Time Research. (http://www.statssa.gov.za/)Google Scholar
Tainton, N. M. (ed.) (1999) Veld Management in South Africa. Pietermar-itzburg: University of Natal Press.Google Scholar
Tiffen, M., Mortimore, M. and Gichuki, F. (1994) More People, Less Erosion: environmental recovery in Kenya. Chichester: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
Todd, S. W. (2000) ‘Patterns of seed production and shrub association in two palatable Karoo shrub species under contrasting land use intensities’, African Journal of Range and Forage Science 17 (1, 2 and 3): 22–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Todd, S. W. and Hoffman, M. T. (1999) ‘A fence-line contrast reveals effects of heavy livestock grazing on plant diversity and community composition in Namaqualand, South Africa’, Plant Ecology 142: 169–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vetter, S. (1996) ‘Investigating the Impacts of Donkeys on a Communal Range in Namaqualand: how much does a donkey “cost” in goat units?’ BSc (Honours) thesis, University of Cape Town.Google Scholar
Webley, L. (1986) ‘Pastoralist ethnoarchaeology in Namaqualand’ in Hall, M. and Smith, A. B. (eds), Prehistoric Pastoralism in Southern Africa. Cape Town: South African Archaeological Society, Goodwin Series 5.Google Scholar
Webley, L. (1992) ‘The History and Archaeology of Pastoralist and Hunter-gatherer Settlement in the North-Western Cape, South Africa’. PhD thesis, Department of Archaeology, University of Cape Town.Google Scholar
Webley, L. (2007) ‘Archaeological evidence for land-use and settlement in Namaqualand over the last 2000 years’, Journal of Arid Environments 70 (4): 629–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weiskel, T. C. (1987) ‘Agents of empire: steps toward an ecology of imperialism’, Environmental Review 4: 275–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wisborg, P. and Rohde, R. F. (2003) ‘Trancraa and communal land rights: lessons from Namaqualand’. PLAAS Policy Brief No. 4, School of Government, University of the Western Cape.Google Scholar
Wisborg, P. and Rohde, R. F. (2004) ‘Contested tenure reform in South Africa — experiences from Namaqualand’, Development Southern Africa 22 (3): 207–25.Google Scholar