Access to Rural Land Rights in the Post-1991 Ethiopia: Unconstitutional Policy Shift
Author(s) -
Brightman Gebremichael Ganta
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of land and rural studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2321-7464
pISSN - 2321-0249
DOI - 10.1177/2321024918808111
Subject(s) - agrarian society , livelihood , politics , land law , constitution , land tenure , population , legislation , human rights , economic growth , political science , economics , law , development economics , geography , sociology , agriculture , demography , archaeology
In an agrarian society, like Ethiopia, where lion share of the population relies on land rights for livelihoods and welfare, access to land is fundamental to be capable of existence as a free and dignified human being. Otherwise, it can also be used a political asset for political control and to impoverish the societal well-being. With the opinion of historical pitfalls and injustices and the tremendous holistic contribution of access to rural land rights in Ethiopia, the constitutional makers of the post-1991 Ethiopia have incorporated the egalitarian concept of ‘free access to land for all needy nationals’. However, the content analysis of the legislation framed aftermath of the 1995 FDRE Constitution reveals the introduction of a policy shift towards land regionalism and market-based land access, because, it has attached regional residency requirement, prioritised to investors and model peasants and introduced land use payment in contradiction to the constitutional rule. Hence, this author argues for the restoration of the Constitutional principle of access to land rights.
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