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PROPERTY OWNERSHIP AND CORRUPTION: EFFECT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF AFRICA
Author(s) -
Olaniyi Felix Olayinka
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
economics and law
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2682-972X
DOI - 10.37708/el.swu.v3i1.2
Subject(s) - indigenous , enforcement , political science , sustainable development , language change , law , land tenure , colonialism , legal pluralism , economic justice , consolidation (business) , political economy , law and economics , sociology , business , geography , legal research , legal realism , ecology , archaeology , art , literature , accounting , biology , agriculture
Pre-colonial communities occupying the space now known as Africa reflected “paradise on earth” having men of integrity, selfless, with focus on community development. The bonding of man with land and the invocation of land-based – spiritual powers allowed for easy enforcement of good morals and conduct in communities. The partitioning of Africa, with the break of the existing social-cultural bonding and the consolidation under colonisation of communities in Africa made communal bonding un-sustainable. The African ubuntu concept gave way, turning an average African a potential drain on his community under a “winner takes all” syndrome, just as he grabs property indiscriminately. The western legal systems introduce private property ownership, but the legal systems in practice record huge breaches of the rule of law, truncation of justice and development. The paper precisely investigates whether development in Africa can be attained based on legal systems foreign to Africa, rather than through indigenous legal tradition.

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