Takalani, HulisaniMafunisa, M. J.Mavundadavhi, Unarine2026-06-222026-06-222026-05-19Mavundadavhi, U. 2026. Administrative challenges in Land Reform: the case of Vhembe District of Municipality. . .https://univendspace.univen.ac.za/handle/11602/3277MSMMADepartment of Public and Development AdministrationThis research explored the administrative obstacles that impede the effective execution of land reform in the Vhembe District Municipality of South Africa. While land reform was designed to redistribute land, rectify historical injustices, and promote inclusive rural development, its implementation has been sluggish, fragmented, and hampered by persistent governance issues. Utilising Institutional Theory as a framework, the study examined how bureaucratic inefficiencies, capacity constraints, poor institutional collaboration, and conflicts between formal processes and customary authority hinder the effectiveness of land redistribution and restitution initiatives. A qualitative case study approach was employed, involving semi-structured interviews with government officials, traditional leaders, and community beneficiaries. The results showed that administrative and procedural delays, such as centralised record systems, protracted vetting processes, and insufficient staffing, considerably slow down land claim processing. The research highlighted the fragmentation of institutions and overlapping responsibilities between the Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development, local municipalities, and traditional councils, which leads to duplication of efforts, mistrust, and inconsistent communication. There were also significant deficiencies in post-settlement support and monitoring, leaving many beneficiaries without the necessary technical assistance, financial resources, and ongoing guidance, causing stagnation and underutilization of restituted land. Furthermore, the study found that reliance on the willing-seller/willing-buyer model contributes to market-driven delays, inflates land prices, and allows landowners to delay or resist negotiations. In conclusion, the administrative challenges faced in Vhembe are systemic, stemming from issues with institutional alignment, resource limitations, and governance complexities. The study recommends enhancing administrative capacity, improving cooperation among governmental and traditional authorities, decentralising approval processes, boosting post-settlement support, and reevaluating market-based land acquisition methods. This research adds to the existing conversation on public administration, land governance, and rural transformation by stressing that effective land reform requires not only changes in policy but also efficient, collaborative, and community-focused administrative practices. Ultimately, the study advocates for a more human-centric approach to land reform that considers the experiences, aspirations, and challenges faced by beneficiaries.1 online resource (i, 147 leaves): color illustrations, color mapenUniversity of VendaUCTDAdministrative challenges in Land Reform: the case of Vhembe District of MunicipalityDissertationMavundadavhi U. Administrative challenges in Land Reform: the case of Vhembe District of Municipality. []. , 2026 [cited yyyy month dd]. Available from:Mavundadavhi, U. (2026). <i>Administrative challenges in Land Reform: the case of Vhembe District of Municipality</i>. (). . Retrieved fromMavundadavhi, Unarine. <i>"Administrative challenges in Land Reform: the case of Vhembe District of Municipality."</i> ., , 2026.TY - Dissertation AU - Mavundadavhi, Unarine AB - This research explored the administrative obstacles that impede the effective execution of land reform in the Vhembe District Municipality of South Africa. While land reform was designed to redistribute land, rectify historical injustices, and promote inclusive rural development, its implementation has been sluggish, fragmented, and hampered by persistent governance issues. Utilising Institutional Theory as a framework, the study examined how bureaucratic inefficiencies, capacity constraints, poor institutional collaboration, and conflicts between formal processes and customary authority hinder the effectiveness of land redistribution and restitution initiatives. A qualitative case study approach was employed, involving semi-structured interviews with government officials, traditional leaders, and community beneficiaries. The results showed that administrative and procedural delays, such as centralised record systems, protracted vetting processes, and insufficient staffing, considerably slow down land claim processing. The research highlighted the fragmentation of institutions and overlapping responsibilities between the Department of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development, local municipalities, and traditional councils, which leads to duplication of efforts, mistrust, and inconsistent communication. There were also significant deficiencies in post-settlement support and monitoring, leaving many beneficiaries without the necessary technical assistance, financial resources, and ongoing guidance, causing stagnation and underutilization of restituted land. Furthermore, the study found that reliance on the willing-seller/willing-buyer model contributes to market-driven delays, inflates land prices, and allows landowners to delay or resist negotiations. In conclusion, the administrative challenges faced in Vhembe are systemic, stemming from issues with institutional alignment, resource limitations, and governance complexities. The study recommends enhancing administrative capacity, improving cooperation among governmental and traditional authorities, decentralising approval processes, boosting post-settlement support, and reevaluating market-based land acquisition methods. This research adds to the existing conversation on public administration, land governance, and rural transformation by stressing that effective land reform requires not only changes in policy but also efficient, collaborative, and community-focused administrative practices. Ultimately, the study advocates for a more human-centric approach to land reform that considers the experiences, aspirations, and challenges faced by beneficiaries. DA - 2026-05-19 DB - ResearchSpace DP - Univen LK - https://univendspace.univen.ac.za PY - 2026 T1 - Administrative challenges in Land Reform: the case of Vhembe District of Municipality TI - Administrative challenges in Land Reform: the case of Vhembe District of Municipality UR - ER -