
Contesting Land and Custom in Ghana
State, Chief and the Citizen
Leiden University Press
Published on 30. October 2008
Book
Paperback/Softback
256 pages
978-90-8728-047-5 (ISBN)
Description
African policy has been showing a growing interest in promoting customary land tenure, based on the idea that the customary represents egalitarian communal arrangements. This approach ignores the fact that customary land relations have been contested throughout history, by various groups that each try to redefine what constitutes custom in a situation of change. In Ghana, land has become increasingly commoditised as a result of the growing value of real estate and the development of new commercial agricultural sectors. This has led to an intensification of attempts by chiefs, earth priests, land users, and governmental actors to redefine land ownership and tenure.The contributions to this essential volume critically examine ideas on customary land tenure in Ghana. They analyze the relations between the customary and statutory tenure and the institutional interactions between the state and traditional authorities in land administration, addressing issues of power, economic interests, transparency, accountability, conflicts and notions of social justice, equity and negotiation. They examine both past and contemporary policy issues, and present a number of case studies with implications for national and international policymakers.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Dordrecht
Netherlands
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Weight
398 gr
ISBN-13
978-90-8728-047-5 (9789087280475)
DOI
10.5117/9789087280475
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Janine Ubink is senior lecturer law and governance in Africa, at the Van Vollenhoven Institute for Law, Governance and Development at Leiden University.|Kojo S Amanor is associate professor at the Institute of African Studies at the University of Ghana.
Content
Contents - 6[-]Abbreviations - 8[-]Contesting land and custom in Ghana: Introduction - 9[-]Ancestral property: Land, politics and 'thedeeds of the ancestors' in Ghana and Co?te d'Ivoire - 28[-]The changing face of customary land tenure - 56[-]Traditional ambiguities and authoritarian interpretations in Sefwi land disputes - 82[-]Chiefs, earth priests and the state: Irrigation agriculture, competing institutions and the transformation of land tenure arrangements in Northeastern Ghana - 114[-]Customary justice institutions and local Alternative Dispute Resolution: What kind of protection can they offer to customary landholders? - 132[-]Struggles for land in peri-urban Kumasi and their effect on popular perceptions of chiefs and chieftaincy - 156[-]Risks and opportunities of state intervention in customary land management: Emergent findings from the Land Administration Project Ghana - 184[-]References - 210[-]Archives - 224[-]List of contributors - 226[-]Index - 228