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Grass Roots Land Tenure among Yeyi of North-Western Botswana

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Extract

A central problem for a national programme of land reform is the selective response of local communities. The plans are often grand, simple and homogeneous; the communities, small, complex and diverse. Moreover, locally a received reform may be re-interpreted—indeed, re-invented—in quite fundamental ways in the light of a locally understood history of introduced change and outside intervention. There may be a deliberately defensive response, due to the high value people put on their community's autonomy or due to the perceived bias of the reform in relation to longstanding oppositions within a community. Sometimes, also there may be an attempt to seize an opportunity, perhaps unintended by the reform's planners, for a further encroachment by some at the expense of others, within the community itself.

Type
I Competition and Conflict: Peasants, Pastoralists, Huntergatherers
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1980

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