2 research outputs found

    The implications of stakeholders' perceptions of land for sustainable land use management in NE Ghana

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    There are negative implications of changes in stakeholders traditional land perceptions for sustainable land use and management in north-east Ghana. In African tenurial systems, land use was based on a local mystical view of the environment and stakeholders broad-based knowledge of the local environments. These led to sustainable resource use and management. However, in the context of current political ecology of north-east Ghana as induced by increased population growth, urbanisation, the market economy, changes in religious beliefs, and government land policies, stakeholders understandings of land have acquired even greater importance in issues of sustainable land resource use and management. A mixed methodological approach, combining both qualitative and quantitative data gathering techniques for information on stakeholders land perceptions, was used to analyse their implications for sustainable land use and management. Changes in the dynamics of stakeholders perceptions of land are partly responsible for the current state of land and environmental degradation in north-east Ghana. Policies aimed at ensuring sustainable land use and environmental management must focus on those traditional land perceptions, which encourage environmental sustainabilit

    Property rights and sustainable development in sub-Saharan Africa: a case study of North-East Ghana

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    Land tenure is the institutional framework within which access to and use of land and environmental resources are achieved. Thus, property rights have a crucial role to play in the attainment of sustainable development. The relevance of sustainable development practices to sub-Saharan Africa cannot be overemphasized. However, due to the urgent need to overcome poverty in sub-Saharan Africa, balancing the environmental, economic and social goals of development is an extremely difficult task in the region. Using both qualitative and quantitative data from North-East Ghana, the linkages between property rights and sustainable development are examined. The evidence adduced shows that the main factors that undermine the prospects of achieving sustainable development are inappropriate agricultural practices, high levels of poverty, lack of environmental knowledge and demographic conditions. The way forward for the concept of sustainable development to be realized, is a systems approach that emphasizes sustainable agricultural practices and poverty reduction measures leading to sustainable livelihoods. The paper concludes that political will and commitment on the part of governments and civil society groups are crucial if sustainable development is to be achieved
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