Rink, BradleyBurgess, Ashleigh Georgia2023-05-042024-03-202023-05-042024-03-202022https://hdl.handle.net/10566/9375Masters of ArtDistrict Six was a pre-apartheid community destroyed by racialized forced relocations. Under the Group Areas Act of the apartheid rule, all District Six residents were forcibly relocated and scattered around the city and elsewhere. The area was obliterated and only places of worship were spared destruction. An affluent white inner-city suburb was one of the state's plans, but it was never realized as former residents protested this apartheid development objective. In the wake of the apartheid�s demise, a land restitution programme was enforced as one way of addressing the country's national recovery through the operations of the Commission on Restitution of Land Rights, performed congruently with the Restitution of Land Rights Act (Act 22 of 1994). But this process has been dilatory and intermittent with respect to District Six, characterised as prolonged experiences of disappointment and occasional bursts of increased efficiency.enApartheidSegregationCape FlatsGroup Areas ActLand Rights Act (Act 22 of 1994).PovertyRaceAssessing sense of place amongst returnees of District Six, Cape TownUniversity of the Western Cape