Legal pluralism, land tenure and the production of “nomotropic urban spaces” in post-colonial Accra, Ghana

Sale of plots of land by Abuba's Real Estates at Asuboi, near Accra, Ghana. Photo by Masssly. Source: Creative Commons.

Sale of plots of land by Abuba's Real Estates at Asuboi, near Accra, Ghana. Photo by Masssly. Source: Creative Commons.

Emmanuel Frimpong Boamah, assistant professor of urban and regional planning, and Margath Walker address two critical issues within the urban legal nexus of Accra by placing nomotropism in dialogue with legal pluralism.

Urban Accra is haunted by the colonial vestige of legal duality reflected most prominently in its customary and statutory legal land systems. The first issue addressed in this paper is the rules which guide land use decisions/actions in urban Accra. The second questions the motivations of actors who adopt these rules. The paper communicates two key arguments. Accra’s urban space is increasingly being unveiled as a complex mix of rule violations and compliances—typifying Accra as a mix of nomotropic urban spaces. Therefore, the designation of a ‘truly’ informal space may only apply when both legal land systems are violated. Second, the urban poor have little or no motivation to comply with customary and/or statutory legal land systems because of increasing land prices and other bureaucratic processes which increase transaction costs pertaining to land.

Authors

Emmanuel Frimpong Boamah,
Assistant Professor
Department of Urban and Regional Planning, University at Buffalo

Margath Walker
University of Louisville

Publisher

Geography Research Forum

Date Published

2017