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No Last Place to Rest

Coal Mining and Dispossession in South Africa

Author: Dineo Skosana  

Paperback

This book examines the impact of coal mining on the lives of former-labour tenant and rural communities in post-apartheid South Africa.

An ethnographic account of the experiences and resistance of displaced communities that are affected by the expansion of coal mining operations in post-apartheid South Africa. It also offers a critical analysis of the legal and policy frameworks that enable their exploitation.

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Summary

This book examines the impact of coal mining on the lives of former-labour tenant and rural communities in post-apartheid South Africa.

An ethnographic account of the experiences and resistance of displaced communities that are affected by the expansion of coal mining operations in post-apartheid South Africa. It also offers a critical analysis of the legal and policy frameworks that enable their exploitation.

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Description

This book examines the impact of coal mining on the lives of former-labour tenant and rural communities in post-apartheid South Africa.
No Last Place to Rest: Coal Mining and Dispossession in South Africa is an exploration of the ongoing struggles faced by families in the Mpumalanga and KwaZulu-Natal provinces of South Africa whose lives have been upended by the relentless expansion of coal mining operations. These regions, burdened with the task of fulfilling the nation's energy needs and boosting the country's economy, witness daily the harsh realities of dispossession that extend far beyond the mere loss of property.
Dineo Skosana presents a compelling argument that dispossession remains a present-day reality and crisis, contradicting the notion that it is merely a relic of the past in the post-apartheid landscape. It challenges the narrow perspective that equates land loss in material and economic terms only. Skosana considers the impact of grave relocations—a common occurrence in these mining-dominated locales— and the profound spiritual anguish and dehumanisation communities endure as their lands are excavated. In African societies, connections to the land extend beyond the material; land has a sacred and ancestral value. Grave relocations disrupt this connection families have with their ancestors. In dispossessing not only the living but also the dead from their lands, the author argues that the act wounds the collective soul of a people, eroding their cultural heritage, and collective identity and belonging.
This book offers a rich ethnographic account of the experiences, struggles and resistance of the affected communities as well as a critical analysis of the legal and policy frameworks that enable their exploitation. In relation to the 'land question' in South Africa, No Last Place to Rest presents deep insights for communities, activists and government sectors acting in support of social justice and redress.

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Critic Reviews

This must-read book is a stark reminder of the violence of extractive industries on marginalised people. Well researched and beautifully written, the book presents a nuanced understanding of meanings of land, as well as of ‘dispossession as continuous lived experience for black communities in South Africa’. – Thembela Kepe, Professor of Geography, University of Toronto.


These accounts of heartbreaking and haunting experiences around land, loss and belonging, drawn from Skosana’s rich fieldwork, tell the story of a multi-faceted, dehumanising and ongoing dispossession of rural South Africans. This work stands as a powerful witness to the pain and loss carried by so many black South Africans, living and dead, from Mpumalanga to KwaZulu Natal and beyond. – Nolundi Luwaya, Director, Land and Accountability Research Centre, University of Cape Town.


This book is pathbreaking. Skosana’s personalised approach effectively demonstrates the onslaught on the land, identity and livelihoods of these communities; her intervention will hopefully lead to social and regulatory change towards protecting the human and environmental, health and safety rights of such communities. – David van Wyk, Lead Researcher, Bench Marks Foundation

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About the Author

Dineo Skosana is a researcher at Society, Work and Politics Institute (SWOP). She holds a PhD in Political Science from the University of the Witwatersrand.

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Product Details

Publisher
Wits University Press
Published
1st March 2025
Pages
184
ISBN
9781776149292

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