Corruption, land reform failures, and sky-rocketing electricity prices are worsening South Africa’s hunger crisis, with one ...
How much of Scotland should one person be allowed to control? Supported by A new land-reform bill aims to unwind a long history of inequality. But centuries of feudalism are difficult to shake.
President Cyril Ramaphosa said that land reform was an issue that was 'top of mind' in the seventh administration.
Property rights remain intact in South Africa. Hot on the heels of this furore has been a notice from the minister of land reform and rural development, Mzwanele Nyhontso, that the government is ...
There is no discourse in South Africa more ancient, more unresolved, and more weaponised than that of land. The passage of ...
UW Professor Emeritus Roy Prosterman, was the founder of Landesa, an international nonprofit that has impacted tens of ...
This may be around the nature of a ‘farm’ and what place is called ‘home’. These themes are explored in this blog, as they ...
Property rights remain intact in South Africa. Hot on the heels of this furore has been a notice from the minister of land reform and rural development, Mzwanele Nyhontso, that the government is ...
This article is from Zimbabweland, a blog written by IDS Research Fellow Ian Scoones. Zimbabweland focuses on issues related to rural livelihoods and land reform in Zimbabwe.