Land tool development in Ghana: building on local aspirations and innovation

IIED Briefing
, 4 pages
PDF (90.36 KB)
17214IIED.pdf
Language:
English, Français
Published: April 2014
Area(s):
IIED Briefing Papers
Product code:17214IIED

Increasing pressures on land resources are putting strain on the traditional institutions and state agencies that jointly govern land tenure in Ghana. Challenges including time, capacity, accountability and cultural constraints mean imported models of land administration such as titling often fail in rural areas. Ghana is developing progressive land policies but securing local land rights in rural areas also needs innovative implementation tools that build on local practices and accommodate Ghana’s legal pluralism and its diverse tenure and inheritances systems. This briefing shares lessons from three such tools piloted in Ghana’s cocoa-growing regions: community-based surveying, tenancy agreement ~templates, and spousal transfer agreements.

Cite this publication

Kakraba-Ampeh, M., Yeboah, E., Asare, R. and Oppong-Konadu, B. (2014). Land tool development in Ghana: building on local aspirations and innovation. .
Available at https://www.iied.org/17214iied