Land Tenure Patterns In Cash Crop Settlement Areas:Experiences From The Sugarcane Growing Zones Of Nyanza Province, Kenya.
Abstract
In many cash crop settlement areas in Africa, the system of land tenure and proprietary
patterns play a crucial role in shaping the farming and agrarian structures in those
communities - so that the rules by which land is allocated, held, controlled .and used are
infact an important component of those agrarian and tenure systems. However, in some
countries such as Kenya, state rhetoric, policy documents and development plans more
often than not lay emphasis only on the cropping patterns and statutory interventions on
land matters thus substantially ignoring the common and evolving tenurial practices and
working proprietary rules on the ground.
This paper documents the outcome of a recent research in the Nyanza sugarcane growing
zones in South West Kenya, an agricultural area - where after political independence in
1963, the Kenya Government settled thousands of farmers on individual registered
holdings.
It examines, by a sample study of the sugarcane farmers, the emerging rights in land and
the farmers' perception of those rights, causes and involvement in land disputes, tenure
security and land rights of women in the wake of statutory intervention on land matters in Kenya.
The paper argues that even in cash crop settlement areas, the individually registered
proprietors perceive land rights and tenure security as guaranteeing a future for their
families and any transactions and dealings in land are meant to safeguard those rights and
not supercede or negate them.
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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