Local politics and the dynamics of property in Africa

Bibliographic Information

Local politics and the dynamics of property in Africa

Christian Lund

Cambridge University Press, 2008

  • : hardback

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 183-196) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Access to land and property is vital to people's livelihoods in rural, peri-urban, and urban areas in Africa. People exert tremendous energy to have land claims recognized as rights with a variety of political, administrative, and legal institutions. This book provides a detailed analysis of how public authority and the state are formed through debates and struggles over property in the Upper East Region of Ghana. While scarcity may indeed promote exclusivity, the evidence from this book shows that when there are many institutions competing for the right to authorize claims to land, the result of an effort to unify and clarify the law is to intensify competition among them and weaken their legitimacy. The book explores how state divestiture of land in 1979 encouraged competition between customary authorities and how the institution of the earthpriest was revived. Such processes are key to understanding property and authority in Africa.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Local politics and the dynamics of property: an introduction
  • 2. 'This situation is incongruous in the extreme': the history of land policies in the Upper Regions of Ghana
  • 3. Who owns Bolgatanga? The revival of the earthpriest and emerging tensions over property
  • 4. Seizing opportunities: chieftaincy, land and local administration
  • 5. Settled facts or facts to settle?: land conflicts under institutional uncertainty
  • 6. 'Bakwu is still volatile': ethno-political conflict and state recognition
  • 7. The rent of non-enforcement: access to forest resources
  • 8. Small dams and fluid tenure
  • 9. Conclusion.

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