Smallholdings In Kenya's Land Policy: Proprietary Structures And Tenurial Practices In The Nyanza Sugarbelt.
Abstract
Policy on smallholdings therefore needs to recognise that the landholding structure is
an interface between the traditional and statutory requirements even in the sugarcane
cash crop regions in Kenya.
Smallholdings occupy an important place in Kenya's policy and strategy on
agricultural development, contributing at least 75 per cent of the country's total value
of agricultural output (67% of which is average marketed output between 1992 and
1999) and providing slightly over 85 % of rural employment.
Land tenure patterns and proprietary structures are important elements of agrarian
systems but these are normally overshadowed by policy considerations regarding
agricultural land use, farming systems and cropping variety.
This paper reports the findings of a research done in the sugarcane growing regions in
Nyanza province, Kenya on the nature and trends of landholding practices of the
smallholder farmers especially how interests in land are passed between living
persons and from one generation to another.
The paper argues that informal interests created (such as user rights for undefined
periods) may result in land disputes after the death of the contracting parties as new
users seek to establish their rights on traditional grounds against claims by the family
of the donor or other parties.
Policy on smallholdings therefore needs to recognise that the landholding structure is
an interface between the traditional and statutory requirements even in the sugarcane
cash crop regions in Kenya.
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
- Research Reports [210]
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