Capitalist rice farming and land allocation in Northern Ghana

TitleCapitalist rice farming and land allocation in Northern Ghana
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1984
AuthorsP.J.J. Konings
Secondary TitleJournal of legal pluralism
Issue22
Pagination1 - 28
Date Published1984///
Publication Languageeng
Keywordscustomary law, Ghana, land law, large farms, rice
Abstract

The recent introduction of capitalist rice farming in the Gbedembilisi Valley (a river valley located in the south-east of the Builsa Traditional Area in the upper Region of Ghana) has given rise to the emergence of a small class of mainly stranger and partly absentee farmers within local peasant communities. This class of capitalist rice farmers has been highly dependent on local peasant communities for the allocation of land and for the supply of labor. This article shows that land allocation has resulted in: 1) various abuses of "customary" land law by both local chiefs and stranger farmers; 2) a protracted conflict between. local peasant communities, on the one hand, and stranger farmers and the state, on the other, about control over Builsa lands, the so-called Gbedembilisi Valley Dispute; and 3) and attempt by the Builsa Traditional Council to effect changes in the "customary" land law in order to "regulate" land allocation to capitalist rice farmers. Notes.

IR handle/ Full text URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1887/4591
Citation Key595