Grazing rights in Namibia’s communal areas: A case study of a local land grabbing dispute in Western Kavango region

This paper presents the case of disputes over grazing land between local communities and pastoralists herders

Abstract

While conflict and competition over land is a major trend in Africa, and there are allegations of ‘land grabbing’ of large areas of land from local people, usually by foreign companies, other more localised forms of competition over land are less well understood. This paper presents the case of disputes over grazing land between local communities in Northern Namibia and pastoralists’ herders who entered the area and engage in alleged illegal grazing and fencing of communal land for their large herds of cattle. Fencing off of communal land (without authorisation) is forbidden in Namibia by the Communal Land Reform Act.

Citation

Muduva, T. FAC Working Paper 93. Grazing rights in Namibia’s communal areas: A case study of a local land grabbing dispute in Western Kavango region. Future Agricultures Consortium Secretariat at the University of Sussex, Brighton, UK (2014) 19 pp.

FAC Working Paper 93. Grazing rights in Namibia’s communal areas: A case study of a local land grabbing dispute in Western Kavango region

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2014