Robinson, Peter Spencer.Griffiths, Susan.2011-02-222011-02-2219961996http://hdl.handle.net/10413/2584Thesis (M.T.R.P.)-University of Natal, Durban, 1996.The report identifies a case study in which there was competition for land between conservation and low income settlement users. The nature of these potentially conflicting interests were identified and an evaluation of how these were played out followed. The fact that the interest of the low income settlement users carried the background of apartheid based discriminations, made the situation a sensitive one. Moreover, it was a unique case whereby the needs of a community's rural lifestyle were to be met in an urban environment. The planning process had political overtones which directed the decision-making process and consequential planning. The study informs development and planning, that in post-apartheid planning, there is the need to incorporate social reconstruction within urban and rural reconstruction. In planning and development processes, planning should play a fundamental role of providing input to guide the process. The input provided by planning should be cross-sectional in the context of conflicting interests, in order for the final plan to represent a compromise, serving the better interests of all the interested parties.enSquatter settlements--KwaZulu-Natal--Richards Bay.Blacks--Housing--Environmental aspects--KwaZulu-Natal.Conservation of natural resources--KwaZulu-Natal--Richards Bay.Theses--Town and regional planning.Competition for land between conservation and low income settlement users : the classical case of Reserve 6 in Richards Bay.Thesis