Type | Journal Article - Law & Society Review |
Title | On the edge of the law: Women's property rights and dispute resolution in Kisii, Kenya |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 43 |
Issue | 1 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2009 |
Page numbers | 39-60 |
URL | http://scholarship.richmond.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1072&context=polisci-faculty-publications |
Abstract | Secure property rights are important, even in traditional or customary systems where formal title is not available or widely used. They encourage people to invest in their resources and protect those investments against expropriation. Security of property rights rest on their clear definition and defense (Acemoglu et al. 2004; De Soto 2000; Fukuyama 2004; Libecap 2003; Norton 2000; Weimer 1997). Yet in many parts of the world, property dispute resolution processes are unclear or inaccessible due to lack of facilities, education or public sensitization. In much of Sub-Saharan Africa, the presence of multiple and overlapping legal systems further complicates the process of dispute resolution. Moreover, the legal systems that exist, customary and public, may not always recognize or enforce the same set of property rights. Ambiguity in the definition or enforcement of property rights leads to an increase in transaction costs in the exchange and transfer of land as well as a residual uncertainty after any land contract. The issue of dispute resolution with regard to property rights has been largely neglected in the academic literature, in part, because many of those writing on property rights live in countries where adjudication is neither a mystery nor a particular problem (although it may become so if one has the misfortune of becoming involved in a legal dispute). |
» | Kenya - Population and Housing Census 1999 |
» | Kenya - Welfare Monitoring Survey 1997 |