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Library Roman water law in rural Africa: the unfinished business of colonial dispossession

Roman water law in rural Africa: the unfinished business of colonial dispossession

Roman water law in rural Africa: the unfinished business of colonial dispossession

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2014
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
handle:10568/58388
License of the resource

This paper discusses four questions about the recent water law reforms in Sub-Saharan Africa, which strengthen permit systems. First, do permit systems continue to dispossess rural small-scale users, as intended by European colonizers who introduced principles of Roman law? Second, is it wrong to assume that one can convert one legal system (customary water rights) into another legal system (permits) in the short term? Third, do current permit systems discriminate against small-scale users? And lastly, do fiscal measures ingrained in permits foster rent seeking and strengthen water resources as a commodity for nationals and foreigners who can pay? As all the answers are positive, the paper concludes by recommending measures to recognize and protect small-scale water users and render state regulation more realistic.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Van der Zaag, P.
Manzungu, E.
Tapela, B.
Koppen, Barbara van

Data Provider
Geographical focus