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Land Politics: How Customary Institutions Shape State Building in Zambia and Senegal. By Lauren Honig. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2022. 320p. $120.00 cloth.

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Land Politics: How Customary Institutions Shape State Building in Zambia and Senegal. By Lauren Honig. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2022. 320p. $120.00 cloth.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 December 2023

Franklin Obeng-Odoom*
Affiliation:
University of Helsinki franklin.obeng-odoom@helsinki.fi
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews: Comparative Politics
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Political Science Association

Lauren Honig has revived the debate on land titling with her new book, Land Politics: How Customary Institutions Shape State Building in Zambia and Senegal. The book draws heavily from the work of well-known analysts like Elinor Ostrom, Vincent Ostrom, and Daron Acemoglu, while also applying a wider array of scholarship, making it an interdisciplinary study.

The questions that Land Politics seeks to answer are: “Why do some chiefs encourage land titling in their domains and others thwart it? Why do some citizens with customary land rights in a community seek a state title while others do not? More generally, how do customary land regimes survive, despite powerful economic interests and state efforts to title land?” (p. 4). Using interviews, Afrobarometer surveys, and observations (pp. 38–82), Land Politics offers a rich tapestry of data, which are analyzed systematically, both quantitatively and qualitatively.

The results show that customary institutions that are more strictly organized, with clearer structures of administration, are more effective in defending customary land rights against state encroachment. But whether tightly or loosely organized, what customary leaders do is based on what they think they can gain from titling. While Honig claims that her book supports the case put forth by Michael Lipton, regarded by The Economist as the “big man of land reform” (“The Big Man of Land Reform,” 2023, p. 44), when she writes that “[t]hese findings from Zambia and Senegal … reflect Michael Lipton’s observations of land politics” (p. 288), for this reviewer, Honig has clearly beaten her own path, too. For instance, the book shows that “the expansion of land titling is not an individual-level economic intervention alone” (p. 291). Again, the book contradicts orthodoxy by contending that customary land is not idle land. Rather, customary land relations generate an active force that is shaped by, but also shapes, the actions and inactions of agents (pp. 4–5).

To illustrate and add nuance to these arguments, the book is divided into eight chapters. Chapters 1 and 8, respectively, set the stage and close the arguments. In between them, Honig develops a rich variety of analyses. Chapter 2 builds the foundations of the study “plot by plot.” First the chapter provides a review of land titling research, and then it proceeds to develop a taxonomy of why land titling is adopted. With explanations ranging from an emphasis on the state to a focus on markets, the chapter makes a strong case for developing a customary-based account, justified further by the fact that a substantial number of Africans express more trust in customary governance than in governance by the state. Chapter 3 develops the author’s “theory of collective costs and customary constraints in land titling.” According to this theory, if the benefits (advantage to customary authorities) exceed the costs (e.g., losing the land to the current and future generations from the pool of customary lands, or losing customary power), then states are in a stronger position to expand titling programs without major pushback. To test this theory, Honig relies on case studies of Zambia and Senegal.

Chapters 5–8 are empirical. Zambia is the centrepiece of chapter 5, while chapter 6 focuses on Senegal. In both chapters, Honig uses fractional logistic regression models focused on the subnational levels. These quantitative analyses are complemented by careful qualitative examination of interviews and surveys. Chapter 7, “Exit or Engagement: How Status within Institutions Impacts Smallholder Titling,” shows that whether one receives security from the customary system depends on one’s relationship with its institutions (those with positive relationships do not seek titling, while those with fractious relationships with customary leaders tend to pursue state titling).

Honig seems to prefer customary land reforms. They provide stronger community-based land programs that are transparent and accountable. “In some circumstances, governments might also mitigate insecurity on customary land by providing citizens with well-funded forms of institutional resources … for example, increasing the accessibility of statutory land tribunals for customary land users to help protect them from unaccountable customary authorities” (p. 291). These recommendations are plausible, if a little expected, because some existing state–community practices, including the role played by tribunals in community dispute resolution, are analogous to Honig’s proposed measures.

More fundamentally, Land Politics’s approach to studying state–community relations sometimes limits its potential. Not only does it say little about the relevant tensions and contradictions between the executive arm of the state and its judicial arm in establishing “property,” “value,” “property value,” and “security of tenure,” for instance, but the book also shelves a detailed and systematic analysis of the major role of powerful transnational political-economic forces that are driving land title registration in Zambia and Senegal. The World Bank, USAID, UN-HABITAT, and a host of (global) NGOs and think tanks well known to be champions of land titling in Africa do not receive systematic or sustained attention. In Zambia, for instance, USAID itself has documented its land policy activities and those of other donor agencies (see, for example, “USAID Country Profile: Land Tenure and Property Rights: Zambia,” 2017). Yet, neither these donors nor Medici Land Governance, the private transnational group that is financing and leading the National Systematic Land Titling Programme in Zambia, is discussed comprehensively in the book. These interest groups differ, but they commonly support titling, including community-based forms of registration.

Therein lies an underrealized tension: land titling may be about national “state expansion,” as the book strenuously argues, but the transformation it envisions is, perhaps, even more centrally about expanding market-based property relations across the scale, as suggested in books such as Karl Polanyi’s ([1944] 2001) The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time and Stefan Ouma’s (2020) Farming as a Financial Asset: Global Finance and the Making of Institutional Landscapes.

Despite these shortcomings, Land Politics offers a rich menu for everyone interested in land. To have the empirical details of two major cases in one book is a significant accomplishment, and so is the insight on the power of both formal (Zambia) and informal (Senegal) institutions. Analytically, too, this book makes important contributions. The “substitution effect” (pp. 283–86) or “the inverse relationship between trust in chiefs and engagement with the state” (p. 284) could be quite a helpful heuristic to examine (mis)trust in institutions and how it is sociospatially produced and maintained. The book’s institutional web that explains the vitality or fragility of the customary system is fruitful for addressing future research. Nuancing the prevailing narrative that the forces of supply and demand for land titles is all that explains the advance of titling is a welcome departure from orthodoxy; so is the idea that the informal can be infinite (pp. 289–90) and resilient, not transient.