Type | Conference Paper - 59th ISI World Statistics Congress, 25-30 August 2013, Hong Kong (Session CPS101) |
Title | Urban and rural trends in South Africa |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2013 |
URL | http://www.2013.isiproceedings.org/Files/CPS101-P5-S.pdf |
Abstract | Defining urban and rural areas for South Africa has a long history. It still remains relevant today, forming an integral part of the country?s growth and development strategies. The definition of the dichotomy is the first step towards understanding the dynamics in these areas and for effective policy implementation. No standard definition exists for the country. Several definitions are used based on the type of application, for example, the provision of water and sanitation services in the former homelands in South Africa, where the former homelands were referred to as rural. In the case of Statistics South Africa (Stats SA), enumeration areas (EAs) demarcated for the censuses were assigned geographical characteristics that describes the type of geographical area it resided in mainly based on administrative boundaries and aerial photograph interpretation (called EA-types and Geography-types). EAs were classified according to these to give some indication of urban (and non-urban). The other evolving trend in the country is to move away from defining urban and rural areas; to rather base policy on settlement typologies that classify cities and towns in the country based on size, function and institutional legacy. This paper explores yet another way of defining urban and rural, that of using census enumeration areas, census data and selected statistical methods to classify urban and rural for South Africa. It begins by summarising the results obtained from a study conducted by Laldaparsad (2006) using the 2001 census data; the methods are applied to the 2011 census data, followed by discussion on the usefulness of the methods and results. |
» | South Africa - Census 2011 |