Land conflicts and social differentiation in eastern Uganda
Land conflicts and social differentiation in eastern Uganda
Rising competition and conflict over land in rural sub-Saharan Africa continues to attract the attention of researchers. Recent work has especially focused on land governance, post-conflict restructuring of tenure relations, and large-scale land acquisitions. A less researched topic as of late, though one deserving of greater consideration, pertains to how social differentiation on the local-level shapes relations to land, and how these processes are rooted in specific historical developments. Drawing on fieldwork conducted in Teso sub-region of eastern Uganda, this paper analyses three specific land conflicts and situates them within a broad historical trajectory. I show how each dispute illuminates changes in class relations in Teso since the early 1990s. I argue that this current period of socioeconomic transformation, which includes the formation of a more clearly defined sub-regional middle class and elite, constitutes the most prominent period of social differentiation in Teso since the early 20th century.
CITATION: Kandel, Matt. Land conflicts and social differentiation in eastern Uganda . : Cambridge University Press , 2017. Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 55, No. 3, September 2017, pp. 395-422 - Available at: https://library.au.int/land-conflicts-and-social-differentiation-eastern-uganda