Abstract
Urbanisation and population movements in KwaZulu Natal from 1980 to 1991 and their implications for urban management are examined. People moved out of Natal rural areas and most small towns and into urban and rural KwaZulu areas. The most rapid growth has been in the Durban Functional Region, especially its KwaZulu districts. There has been movement into KwaZulu rural areas, both around urban centres and in outlying areas. A number of the larger towns have experienced population in‐migration even where employment and growth in output have been static or have declined. These trends raise questions about the explanatory value of urban transition models and suggest rather more complex patterns of movement.
Notes
This article is based on Todes & Smit (1993). the work for which was carried out as part of a larger study of the economy of Region E undertaken for the Natal Regional Development Advisory Committee. It draws on work which was done solely by the author.
Department of Town and Regional Planning, University of Natal. Durban.