Institutional Continuity and Change: A century of smallholders' water rights in Meru, Tanzania
Författare
Summary, in English
In the late 19th century Meru smallholders established the first irrigation furrows on Mount Meru, Tanzania with the intent to prolong farming seasons and improve harvests. Soon neighbouring estate holders followed suit. Since then there has been a continuous construction of furrows by both smallholders and estates in the area. Smallholders’ furrows were from the onset managed as de facto communal property with private user right, while estate furrows were privately owned. Over the whole period, and especially during the last half century, population increase has caused land scarcity, which has encouraged a general intensification of farming methods. The continuous push to keep up production on decreasing plots has made irrigation more important today than ever before. Land scarcity has been accompanied by water scarcity translating into economic constraints that in turn have caused legal conflicts between the two parallel property right systems. Despite institutional and technological change as well as changes in relative prices of factors of production, property rights governing smallholder furrows have been characterised by continuity. The aim of the paper is to map and explain driving forces behind this institutional continuity.
Avdelning/ar
Publiceringsår
2010
Språk
Engelska
Fulltext
Dokumenttyp
Konferensbidrag
Ämne
- Economic History
Nyckelord
- sub-Saharan Africa
- irrigation
- Tanzania
- property rights
Conference name
African Studies Association UK, Biennial Conference
Conference date
2010-09-16 - 2010-09-19
Status
Unpublished