“…Lemon's comment (1982) illustrates this observation: "To the inconvenience of long-distance commuting is added the need to travel to "white" towns for most goods and services". Browett and Fair (1974) support this observation by showing how restrictions resulting from the apartheid policy (control of mobilities towards cities, restricted access to employment or the regulation to open business activities etc.) contradict the implicit rationality of the individual that is underlying in Christaller's theory or the principles of the market law.…”
Section: Optimising Models Of Urban Settlementsmentioning
“…Lemon's comment (1982) illustrates this observation: "To the inconvenience of long-distance commuting is added the need to travel to "white" towns for most goods and services". Browett and Fair (1974) support this observation by showing how restrictions resulting from the apartheid policy (control of mobilities towards cities, restricted access to employment or the regulation to open business activities etc.) contradict the implicit rationality of the individual that is underlying in Christaller's theory or the principles of the market law.…”
Section: Optimising Models Of Urban Settlementsmentioning
“…Three railway lines were built in the 1890s to connect the Witwatersrand with the commercial ports of Maputo, Durban and Cape Town, based largely on public funding (Turok, 2014). If the coast contained the largest towns and the economic and political centers during the colonial era, the exceptional growth of Johannesburg brought about a switch in the urban structure: the center of gravity in the urban system and the railway network moved towards the interior of the country (Fig.2), starting a profound and persistent pattern of spatial polarization (Browett & Fair, 1974).…”
Section: Figure 1: Spatial Diffusion Of Railways In South Africamentioning
“…These included Houghton [13]; Davies [14] and Browett and Fair [15]. In an assessment of the applicable spatial planning theories and its influence on underpinning the development of spatial systems, Schoeman [16] identifies the stadiums through which the South African National Spatial system has evolved inclusive of a pre-industrial phase (1652 to 1870), Transition Stage (1871 to 1910) and Industrial Stage (1911 to the present).…”
Section: Spatial Planning Systems and Strategic Planningmentioning
Since 1994 with democratization the national and its underpinning provincial spatial systems in South Africa were subjected to intensive transformation processes and impacts resulting from a changing policy, legislative and planning instrument frameworks. These influences and impacts resulted in important planning and development consequences for strategic transportation, spatial planning and development within all spheres of government.The South African National Spatial System (NSS) consists of nine (9) Provincial Spatial Systems (PSS). These PSS anchor and optimize transportation and spatial planning and development. Due to historic and locational factors, the study area (Gauteng PSS) fulfils a primary role in the growth and development of the national economy (NSS) and its development.The paper is an endeavour to assess the evolution of provincial planning instruments qualitatively to support sustainable development and to link need and potential in terms of national and provincial plans and to reconcile the transformation process in local context.
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