Do Design Science Research and Design Thinking Processes Improve the ‘Fit’ of the Fit-For-Purpose Approach to Securing Land Tenure for All in South Africa?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Framework
2.1. Overview
2.2. Fit for Purpose
2.3. Design Science Research Paradigm
2.3.1. The Alignment of the Design Science Research Paradigm with Theories and Methods Underpinning LAS Reform
2.3.2. Relevance of DSR-BS Processes to LAS Reform
- Identify the problem—a process underscored by behavioral science.
- Define objectives for a solution.
- Design the artefact—this can be a construct, a model, a method, or an implementation [34].
- Demonstrate the use of the artefact to solve the problems identified in (1).
- Evaluation of the artefact.
- Communication of findings.
2.4. Design Thinking Process Model
- Empathize—research the user’s needs.
- Define—state your user’s needs and problems.
- Ideate—challenge assumptions and create ideas.
- Prototype—start to create solutions.
- Test—try out your solutions.
- Invention: creation of new ideas—breaking new ground.
- Judgement: this is based on the criteria of desirability—does the invention meet the needs (significant for the users), is it feasible (suitable in the context), is it viable (sustainable over time)?
- Connection and development: based on the criteria of usefulness (does it perform the task?), useableness (is it compatible with a human user?), desirability (does it deliver emotional satisfaction?)
- Integration and evaluation: the worthiness of the solution—should it be implemented (for stakeholders, especially users, society, the state)?
“The principle of design … is grounded in the quality of experience for all of those served by the organization. This includes the individuals who directly use the products and services of the organization, but it also includes those who are affected by the internal and external operations of the organization and by those in society at large who are ultimately affected by the vision and strategies of the organization”.[18]
“Human-centered design is fundamentally an affirmation of human dignity. It is an ongoing search for what can be done to support and strengthen the dignity of human beings as they act out their lives in variety social, economic, political, and cultural circumstances … the quality of design is distinguished not merely by technical skill of execution or by aesthetic vision but by the moral and intellectual purpose toward which technical and artistic skill is directed.”.[35]
2.5. Comparison
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Materials
- Using various combinations of keywords (FFP LA, FFP, fit-for-purpose, land administration, land reform, South Africa, Africa), online search engines (Google Scholar, Google Books, Google, ResearchGate, International Federation of Surveyors (FIG), University of Cape Town (UCT) library databases including EBSCOhost, Elsevier, Emerald, HeinOnline, Springer, Taylor and Francis, Thomson Reuters) were interrogated for peer-reviewed journal articles, doctoral theses, conference proceedings, books, policy documents, and technical reports.
- Literature that included FFP case studies and high-level critiques of the FFP approach was considered. Books and chapters that investigate, explain, or critique land reform processes in sub-Saharan Africa, and particularly South Africa, are included. (Many of these are known to the authors or would have appeared on ResearchGate and other searched sites as well as UCT libraries.) National land policies and high-level country analyses provide rich data—these are well-known to practitioners and researchers in South Africa.
- Literature focusing on technical interventions was excluded.
3.2. Coding and Extraction Process
4. Results
4.1. The Process of Understanding the Context
4.2. The Problem Identification Process
4.2.1. Use of a Framework
4.2.2. Reading and Listening
4.2.3. Sensitivity to the Problems
- social strategies for gaining access to land and securing tenure (often multiple and overlapping holders and rights), especially within informal and customary settings [61].
4.3. The Process of Identifying Objectives and A Strategy
4.3.1. Underlying Assumptions and How They Influence Goal, Objective, and Strategy Formulation
4.3.2. Methods Used to Identify and Report on the Goals, Objectives, and Strategy
4.3.3. The Role of Politics in Land Administration Reform Strategy
4.3.4. Commentary on the Process
4.4. The Design Process
4.4.1. International Innovative Design
4.4.2. South Africa’s Need for Innovative Design
- interrogating the legal and social system of landholding;
- design of new ways of recording rights and interests in land and land-based resources (particularly in customary communal and other complex settings, possibly family titles, locally nuanced, that consider new developments such as blockchain);
- design new types of proprietary land unit that may
- ○
- challenge the parcel as the basic unit of the cadaster;
- ○
- include boundaries that are fluid (shifting over the short or longer term), fuzzy (imprecisely defined in space), and adaptable (changing in nature);
- ○
- represent the third spatial dimension;
- ○
- define spatial rights that may be of variable nature, nested, overlapping, and time-varying;
- ○
- relate to rights holders that are individual, family, and kinship (including multigenerational landholding: living, dead, and unborn), and other collectives based on voluntary affiliation (preferred over tribal affiliation);
- overcoming institutional and process issues of delivery and controlling and promoting effective land use;
- passing new laws through interdepartmental work, and modifying and integrating silos in legal and land administration systems;
- adopting a social systems approach to solutions; dealing with complexity; understanding humankind–land relationships through an African lens (or lenses);
- promoting a continuum of land rights in practice;
- promoting new technical (for example IS and surveying) tools;
- promoting gender equity; promoting stakeholder participation;
- dealing with land acquisition by the State for land reform purposes;
- designing dispute and conflict resolution mechanisms; and
- managing differential power relationships and corruption.
4.4.3. Essential Elements Identified for South Africa
4.5. The Capacity Development Process
4.6. The Piloting/Demonstration and Evaluation Processs
4.6.1. Pilot Studies
4.6.2. Performance Measurement
4.6.3. Commentary on the Process
4.7. The Communication Process
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Source (Reference-Date-Ordered) | Number of Codes Used | Coded References |
---|---|---|
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Whittal, J. Fiscal Cadastral Systems Reform A Case Study of the General Valuation Project 2000 in the City of Cape Town, Ph.D. Thesis, University of Calgary, Canada, 2008 | 13 | 17 |
Republic of South Africa Green Paper on Land Reform; Government Printer, Pretoria, 2011 | 25 | 103 |
McLaren, R. Crowdsourcing support of land administration—A partnership approach. International Federation of Surveyors, Article of the month: December 2011. | 12 | 41 |
Hall, R. Land Reform Policy Discussion Document, South African History Online, 2012. | 35 | 436 |
Association for Rural Advancement (AFRA), Traditional Courts Bill uses apartheid laws to subjugate communities. Cape Times, 21 September 2012, 11 | 9 | 9 |
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Whittal, J. A New Conceptual Model for the Continuum of Land Rights. South African J. Geomatics 2014, 3, 13–32 | 17 | 43 |
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Enemark, S.; McLaren, R.; Lemmen, C. Fit-For-Purpose Land Administration Guiding Principles; United Nations Habitat Global Land Tools Network: Nairobi, Kenya, 2015 | 27 | 349 |
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Cousins, B. Land reform in South Africa is sinking. Can it be saved? A provocation commissioned by the Nelson Mandela Foundation DST/NRF Research Chair in Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies, University of the Western Cape | 16 | 76 |
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Asiama, K.; Bennett, R.; Zevenbergen, J. Participatory land administration on customary lands: A practical VGI experiment in Nanton, Ghana. ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Information 2017, 6 | 22 | 75 |
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Report of the High Level Panel on the Assessment of Key Legislation and the Acceleration of Fundamental Change | 43 | 213 |
Koeva, M.; Bennett, R.; Gerke, M.; Crommelinck, S.; Stöcker, C.; Crompvoets, J.; Ho, S.; Schwering, A.; Chipofya, M.; Schultz, C.; et al. Towards innovative geospatial tools for fit-for-purpose land rights mapping. Int. Arch. Photogramm. Remote Sens. Spat. Inf. Sci.-ISPRS Geospatial Week. 2017, 42, 37–43, doi:10.5194/isprs-archives-XLII-2-W7-37-2017 | 50 | 289 |
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African Union’s Agenda 2063 | United Nations Sustainable Development Goals |
---|---|
1: A prosperous Africa based on inclusive growth and sustainable development | 1: End poverty in all its forms everywhere |
3: An Africa of good governance, democracy, respect for human rights, justice, and the rule of law | 2: End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition, and promote sustainable agriculture |
4: A peaceful and secure Africa | 5: Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls |
6: An Africa whose development is people-driven | 11: Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient, and sustainable |
7: Africa as a strong, united, and influential global player and partner | 15: Protect, restore, and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems. |
Spatial Framework | Legal Framework | Institutional Framework |
---|---|---|
Visible (general) boundaries | Flexible, administrative | Good land governance |
Aerial imagery | Continuum of tenure | Integration |
Accuracy for purpose | Flexible recordation | Flexible ICT approach |
Updating, upgrading, ongoing improvement | Gender equity | Land information: transparent, affordable, accessible |
(Behavioral and) Design Science Research (DSR-BS) | Fit-For-Purpose (FFP) | Design Thinking (DT) |
---|---|---|
(Describe the situation/context) | Analysis of country context. Analysis of existing spatial/legal/institutional frameworks | Empathize—needs |
Problem ID and motivation | (incorporated in analysis above) | Define—needs and problems |
Definition of objectives | Developing a country-specific FFP strategy for LA | |
Design and development | Designing the country-specific FFP spatial/legal/institutional frameworks | Ideate—challenge assumptions and create ideas—the invention moment Prototype—solution |
Capacity development | ||
Demonstration | Test—the judgement moment | |
Evaluation | Economic benefits analysis | the connection and development moment the integration and evaluation moment |
Communication | Country-specific instruction manuals |
(Behavioral and) Design Science Research (DSR-BS) | Fit-For-Purpose (FFP) | Design Thinking (DT) |
---|---|---|
(Describe the situation/context) | Analysis of country context. Analysis of existing spatial/legal/institutional frameworks | Empathize—needs |
(Behavioral and) Design Science Research (DSR-BS) | Fit-For-Purpose (FFP) | Design Thinking (DT) |
---|---|---|
Problem ID and motivation | (incorporated in analysis?) | Define—needs and problems |
(Behavioral and) Design Science Research (DSR-BS) | Fit-For-Purpose (FFP) | Design Thinking (DT) |
---|---|---|
Definition of objectives | Developing a country-specific FFP strategy for LA |
(Behavioral and) Design Science Research (DSR-BS) | Fit-For-Purpose (FFP) | Design Thinking (DT) |
---|---|---|
Design and development | Designing the country-specific FFP spatial/legal/institutional frameworks | Ideate—challenge assumptions and create ideas Prototype—solution |
(Behavioral and) Design Science Research (DSR-BS) | Fit-For-Purpose (FFP) | Design Thinking (DT) |
---|---|---|
Capacity development |
(Behavioral and) Design Science Research (DSR-BS) | Fit-For-Purpose (FFP) | Design Thinking (DT) |
---|---|---|
Demonstration | Test—the judgement moment | |
Evaluation | Economic benefits analysis | the connection and development moment the integration and evaluation moment |
(Behavioral and) Design Science Research (DSR-BS) | Fit-For-Purpose (FFP) | Design Thinking (DT) |
---|---|---|
Communication | Country-specific instruction manuals |
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Hull, S.; Whittal, J. Do Design Science Research and Design Thinking Processes Improve the ‘Fit’ of the Fit-For-Purpose Approach to Securing Land Tenure for All in South Africa? Land 2021, 10, 484. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10050484
Hull S, Whittal J. Do Design Science Research and Design Thinking Processes Improve the ‘Fit’ of the Fit-For-Purpose Approach to Securing Land Tenure for All in South Africa? Land. 2021; 10(5):484. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10050484
Chicago/Turabian StyleHull, Simon, and Jennifer Whittal. 2021. "Do Design Science Research and Design Thinking Processes Improve the ‘Fit’ of the Fit-For-Purpose Approach to Securing Land Tenure for All in South Africa?" Land 10, no. 5: 484. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10050484
APA StyleHull, S., & Whittal, J. (2021). Do Design Science Research and Design Thinking Processes Improve the ‘Fit’ of the Fit-For-Purpose Approach to Securing Land Tenure for All in South Africa? Land, 10(5), 484. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10050484