Abstract:
The purpose of land reform in South Africa was to correct the injustices of the apartheid era where millions of blacks were dispossessed of their land. A major challenge has been the failure of many projects on land reform projects. Some scholars attribute the failure largely to the provision of inadequate pre and postsettlement support. The paper therefore aims to analyse that support and its contribution to failure of some land reform projects. The objectives are to examine the machineries for the delivery of settlement support, the nature of support and also to analyse its performance. The methodology was a qualitative desk study. Findings pointed to weak institutional capacities in planning and implementation and poor inter-governmental collaboration as key factors for failure. The paper recommends that as the country considers how it will implement the 'Land. Expropriation Without Compensation' policy, the government should significantly invest in an effective, comprehensive and integrated support system of support to beneficiaries to guarantee the success of land reform.