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GLOBAL ADVANCED RESEARCH JOURNAL OF HISTORY, POLITICAL SCIENCE AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS (GARJHPSIR) ISSN:2315-506X

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Vol. 2(4), December 2013 Special Issue
 

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Malambo AH


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Global Advanced Research Journal of History, Political Science and International Relations (GARJHPSIR) ISSN: 2315-506X

December 2013 Special Issue Vol. 2(4), pp 053-066

Copyright © 2013 Global Advanced Research Journals

 

 

Full Length Research Paper

 

Land administration in Zambia since 1991:  History, opportunities and challenges

 

Augrey H. Malambo

 

The University of Zambia, Department of Geography, School of Natural Sciences Box 32372, Lusaka, Zambia.

 

E-mail: augrey.malambo@yahoo.com

 

Accepted 01 December, 2013

 

Abstract

 

The Land tenure system in Zambia is divided in the following administrative segments:  colonial period 1880-1964; immediate post independence 1964-1975, post independence period of one party political administration 1975-1991; and the liberalization period of multiparty government of post 1991, with emphasis on the implications of the 1995 Lands Act. Generally, each period of land tenure administration provided local people relative opportunities and challenges. The aim of this study was to establish the opportunities to and challenges faced by local people in Chibombo district emerging from the 1995 Lands Act. Primary data was obtained through questionnaires, interviews and observations between August 2008 and 2012 involving 60 smallholder farmers around Chibombo (39 respondents) and Mungule (21 respondents) areas of Chibombo district. Through this study it was concluded that several individuals, from within Chibombo district and elsewhere, had obtained title deeds on customary land based on the 1995 Lands Act. Dominantly, among the local people who managed to obtain title deeds to their pieces of land over 70 percent were men. Furthermore, through this policy shift new investments emerged on customary land including a cooking oil processing plant, filling stations and lodges, among others, and the local people benefitted through employment creation, improvements to their houses, purchase of solar panels, radios, cell phones and others. On the contrary, others reduced their land hectarage through selling of parts of their land for money, some relocated from their previous residence and evidence of land boundary conflicts was recorded.  Therefore, a mixture of opportunities and challenges emerged from the introduction of the 1995 Lands Act.

 

Keywords: Chief, Chibombo Farming Block, Chibombo District, Customary/Traditional land, District Council, Headman, Land holding right, Land owner, Lands Act (1995), Leasehold Title, Katuba Farming Block, State land, Title Deed, Zambia.