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Showing items 1 through 9 of 22.
  1. Library Resource
    Journal Articles & Books
    October, 2007
    Lesotho

    State efforts to reform the customary land tenure system of Lesotho have failed to produce intended outcomes. An explanation given for this failure is customary chiefs' opposition to state-sponsored reforms, as these were purportedly meant to curtail their power over land. This explanation initially appeared in 1974 connection with the Administration of Lands Act of 1973, and has since been handed down through generations of academics and policy analysts in Lesotho and outside and uncritically accepted as immutable truth.

  2. Library Resource
    Journal Articles & Books
    December, 2007
    South Africa, Southern Africa

    Soil microbial biomass is considered as an important early indicator of changes that may occur
    in the long term with regard to soil fertility and constitutes an important source and sink of nutrients. In
    South Africa, rangeland monitoring has mostly focused on assessing changes of aboveground vegetation
    in response to land uses effects, but the associated changes at belowground soil level remain a topic of
    further research. The aim of this study was to explore soil microbial biomass at three sites under

  3. Library Resource
    Journal Articles & Books
    December, 2007
    South Africa, Southern Africa

    This article analyzes debates over tenure reform policy in post-apartheid South Africa, with a particular focus on the controversial Communal Land Rights Act of 2004. Land tenure systems in the 'communal areas' of South Africa are described as dynamic and evolving regimes within which a number of important commonalities and continuities over time are observable.

  4. Library Resource
    Journal Articles & Books
    December, 2007
    South Africa, Southern Africa

    When South Africa's land reform programme finally reached rural Umbumbulu, a potential for conflict over land emerged unexpectedly. Strategically located near a major urban centre, residents of this region have long relied on wages and social welfare grants. Land was valued primarily for residential security and as a symbolic representation of community membership, rather than for productive purposes. This emphasis on community membership, however, created the potential for conflict when a local chief challenged a civil society group over their authority to claim land.

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