Defusing Land Disputes? The Politics of Land Certification and Dispute Resolution in Burundi

ABSTRACT There is a growing interest in localized land registration, in which user rights are acknowledged and recorded through a community‐based procedure, as an alternative to centralized titling to promote secure tenure in sub‐Saharan Africa. Localized land registration is expected to reduce land...

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Veröffentlicht in:Development and change 2020-11, Vol.51 (6), p.1454-1480
Hauptverfasser: Tchatchoua‐Djomo, Rosine, van Leeuwen, Mathijs, van der Haar, Gemma
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container_title Development and change
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creator Tchatchoua‐Djomo, Rosine
van Leeuwen, Mathijs
van der Haar, Gemma
description ABSTRACT There is a growing interest in localized land registration, in which user rights are acknowledged and recorded through a community‐based procedure, as an alternative to centralized titling to promote secure tenure in sub‐Saharan Africa. Localized land registration is expected to reduce land disputes, yet it remains unclear how it impacts disputes in practice. This is an urgent question for war‐affected settings that experience sensitive land disputes. This article discusses findings from ethnographic fieldwork in Burundi on pilot projects for land certification. It identifies three ways in which certification feeds into land conflicts rather than preventing or resolving them. First, land certification represents a chance for local people to enter a new round of claim making, as those ignored or disenfranchised in earlier rounds see new opportunities. Second, it offers an avenue for institutional competition between different land‐governing institutions. Third, certification provides politicians with openings to interfere in tenure relations and to expand their support base. The authors conclude that these problems are not simply a matter of inadequate policy design. Rather, there are crucial political dimensions to land conflicts and land tenure in Burundi, which means that land registration programmes run the risk of inflaming conflictive property relations in rural communities.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/dech.12621
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Business Source Complete; Political Science Complete
subjects Certification
Disputes
Ethnography
Fieldwork
Land tenure
Pilot projects
Politicians
Politics
Registration
Rural areas
Rural communities
title Defusing Land Disputes? The Politics of Land Certification and Dispute Resolution in Burundi
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