2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.landusepol.2019.104042
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Windows of opportunity or windows of exclusion? Changing dynamics of tenurial relations in rural Ghana

Abstract: Central to contemporary debates on land tenure in sub-Saharan Africa are questions concerning appropriate pathways to successfully harmonize customary and statutory land tenure arrangements to address normative goals of improving access to land and security of tenure for the poor and marginalized. These are particularly prevalent in the face of increasing commodification and individualisation of land rights. Developing appropriate land policies requires a detailed understanding of existing tenurial dynamics. T… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…Since female farmers have long been disadvantaged in Ghanaian cocoa cultivation (e.g., Oppong et al, 1975;Quisumbing, 1996;Quisumbing et al, 2001;Baffoe-Asare et al, 2013;Barrientos, 2013;Marston, 2016;Friedman et al, 2018), we set out to examine how female farmers fared in their adaptation to drought. As in many economicallydeveloping agrarian communities, Ghanaian women are systematically disadvantaged since they are generally expected to perform most domestic chores as well as carry out farm labor, and they typically hold fewer land titles (Asaaga and Hirons, 2019). Yet, land-ownership is often a precondition for membership in official farmer organizations, participation in training and information programmes, applying for credit, and managing an adequate diversity of crops (Fountain and Hütz-Adams, 2018).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since female farmers have long been disadvantaged in Ghanaian cocoa cultivation (e.g., Oppong et al, 1975;Quisumbing, 1996;Quisumbing et al, 2001;Baffoe-Asare et al, 2013;Barrientos, 2013;Marston, 2016;Friedman et al, 2018), we set out to examine how female farmers fared in their adaptation to drought. As in many economicallydeveloping agrarian communities, Ghanaian women are systematically disadvantaged since they are generally expected to perform most domestic chores as well as carry out farm labor, and they typically hold fewer land titles (Asaaga and Hirons, 2019). Yet, land-ownership is often a precondition for membership in official farmer organizations, participation in training and information programmes, applying for credit, and managing an adequate diversity of crops (Fountain and Hütz-Adams, 2018).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As evidenced in Table 2 and Figure 3, the overall results suggest that different land manageme nt strategies (chemical fertiliser application, on-farm tree planting and preservation of naturallyoccurring tree species) 9 were implemented on majority of plots although investment in on-farm tree 9 It is noteworthy that the unique properties of cocoa (relative to other food crops such as maize and cassava) shape household SLM investment behaviour differently. For instance, the longevity and the relatively high market price of cocoa positively affects the quality of land rights to the extent that cocoa farmers may be better -positioned to invest more in say long-term SLM practices (like on-farm tree planting and conservation of naturally-occurring trees) relative to other food crop farmers (see Kolavalli and Vigneri, 2011;Quisumbing et al 2001).…”
Section: Adoption Of Slm Practicesmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Preferential rights refer to the right of a landholder to bequeath or transfer land to their next of kin inter vivos as inheritance. Under sharecropping and land rental arrangements, landholders (mostly migrant settler farmers) only have limited rights to occupy and use land for a specified duration subject to certain agreed terms with the landowner (seeAsaaga and Hirons, 2019).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the myriad legal issues related to tree tenure likely represents the most debilitating factor to achieving pro-poor, equitable CSC. Complexities surrounding tree tenure is not a new phenomenon, but deeply embedded in the Ghanaian cocoa and forestry sector (Ruf, 2011;Hirons et al, 2018a;Asaaga and Hirons, 2019;Bunn et al, 2019). Farmers remain highly uncertain about their legal rights to trees on their own farms.…”
Section: Complexities Around (Shade) Tree Tenure Rights and Shade Optimamentioning
confidence: 99%