Columbia International Affairs Online: Policy Briefs

CIAO DATE: 02/2014

Institutionalisation of Sub-Saharan Africa's Land Reforms: The Way Forward

Rasmus Hundsbæk Pedersen

February 2014

Danish Institute for International Studies

Abstract

Governments across Sub-Saharan Africa seek to address the increasing pressure on land by introducing land reforms. Overall, most of the legal changes are commendable because they improve tenure security for the rural poor, whose rights are rarely formally registered, and increase local control over land. However, reforms are only slowly being implemented and often in a piecemeal manner. This policy brief sheds light on how to improve implementation. By introducing the concept of institutionalization into the land reform debate it highlights that institutions are not only made up of laws, administrative rules and structures. More attention should be directed towards the role of culture, that is, people’s perceptions and practices. The main problem with current interventions to implement reform is that they tend to be short-sighted and focus on the issuance of land title deeds. However, at the local level people often have other priorities. Improved access to land administration and land dispute settlement institutions in the longer run is important.