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Finalist for the African Studies Association's 2021 Best Book
Prize. Explores the limits of law in changing unequal land
relations in Kenya. Why, despite the introduction of new land laws
beginning in 2012, has there been an increase in land grabbing in
Kenya? Why has legislation failed to address long standing
grievances about grossly unequal land distribution? This important
book suggests that questions of justice should be central to
discussions of African land reform. Constitutional reformers in
Kenya promised transformative changes in land relations. However,
the reality has disappointed. Land law reforms since 2010 have been
more concerned with the administration of land and with
bureaucratic power than with the real consequences of unequal
access to land for ordinary Kenyans. Manji documents this thwarted
struggle and surveys the prospects for genuine change. Published in
association with the British Institute in Eastern Africa. Ambreena
Manji is Professor of Land Law and Development at the School of Law
and Politics, Cardiff University. Between 2010 and 2014, she was
Director of the British Institute in Eastern Africa. Her books
include The Politics of Land Reform in Africa (2006). Vita Books:
Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, South Sudan and South
Africa.
Finalist for the African Studies Association's 2021 Best Book
Prize. Explores the limits of law in changing unequal land
relations in Kenya. Why, despite the introduction of new land laws
beginning in 2012, has there been an increase in land grabbing in
Kenya? Why has legislation failed to address long standing
grievances about grossly unequal land distribution? This important
book suggests that questions of justice should be central to
discussions of African land reform. Constitutional reformers in
Kenya promised transformative changes in land relations. However,
the reality has disappointed. Land law reforms since 2010 have been
more concerned with the administration of land and with
bureaucratic power than with the real consequences of unequal
access to land for ordinary Kenyans. Manji documents this thwarted
struggle and surveys the prospects for genuine change. Published in
association with the British Institute in Eastern Africa. Ambreena
Manji is Professor of Land Law and Development at the School of Law
and Politics, Cardiff University. Between 2010 and 2014, she was
Director of the British Institute in Eastern Africa. Her books
include The Politics of Land Reform in Africa (2006). Vita Books:
Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, Burundi, South Sudan and South
Africa.
Feminist scholars and activists have turned their attention to
international law with apparently dramatic results. The impact of
feminist engagement is felt in diverse areas from human rights to
environmental law. But what do these successes signal for the
future? How open is international law to feminist enquiry? What
does it mean to do feminist theory in international law? What
lessons have we learned from engaging with international law,and
what directions do we still need to explore? International Law:
Modern Feminist Approaches brings together feminist scholars from
Australia, Canada, Sweden, Serbia and Montenegro, the United States
and United Kingdom. Drawing on diverse theoretical approaches, the
chapters explore the directions and tensions in feminist engagement
with various areas of international law from human rights, trade
and development, and gender mainstreaming, to humanitarian
intervention, environmental and humanitarian law.
Across Africa land is being commodified: private ownership is
replacing communal and customary tenure; Farms are turned into
collateral for rural credit markets. Law reform is at the heart of
this revolution. The Politics of Land Reform in Africa casts a
critical spotlight on this profound change in African land economy.
The book illuminates the key role of legislators, legal consultants
and academics in tenure reform. These players exert their influence
by translating the economic and regulatory interests of the World
Bank, civil society groups and commercial lenders in to questions
of law. Drawing on political economy and actor-network theory The
Politics of Land Reform in Africa is an indispensable contribution
to the study of agrarian change in developing countries.
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