Land Governance and Conflict in West Africa through Interdisciplinary Empirical Lenses

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Date

2024-09

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Merian Institute for Advanced Studies in Africa (MIASA)

Abstract

This working paper addresses the following central questions: (i) How does the commodification of land challenge distinctions between rural and urban spaces? (ii) What new forms of differentiation emerge from commodification, for example the alienation of land markets from land governance regimes? (iii) How does commodification help our understanding of the resilience of custom and egalitarianism? (iv) How useful are property rights frameworks, whether customary, statutory or new forms of tenure, for land management and sustainability? Four authors, members of the MIASA Interdisciplinary Fellow Group (IFG 6) on Land Governance, applied ethnographic and cross-sectional research methods to examine case studies in Ghana, Mali and Senegal. This research contributes to an understanding of the perceptions, discourses and practices relating to land commodification and conflicts, as well as the way in which endogenous perceptions of access to land in West Africa are expressed and adapt to changing circumstances.

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Keywords

West Africa, land governance, conflict, commodification, legal pluralism, customary land, disposition, equity, investment, Senegal, Ghana, legal and economic anthropology, Mali, governance, decentralisation, land tenure, reform process, women, cities, privatised cities, transformation, urban, rural

Citation

To cite: Author name, author first name, title of the paper, in: Land Governance and Conflict in West Africa through Interdisciplinary Empirical Lenses, MIASA Working Paper No 2024(1), pp. X–X, online: hyperlink.

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