No. , August 2019
Index
- Access to property in Africa: An introductory survey
- Absolute ownership and legal pluralism in Roman law: Two arguments
- Legal pluralism in Africa: The implications of state recognition of customary laws illustrated from the field of land law
- Legal pluralism and access to land in Nigeria
- The changing dynamics of customary land tenure: Women’s access to and control over land in Botswana
- Taking the gap – ‘Living law land grabbing’ in the context of customary succession laws in Southern Africa
- Securing women’s property inheritance in the context of plurality: Negotiations of law and authority in Mbuzini customary courts and beyond
- Contested power and apartheid tribal boundaries: The implications of ‘living customary law’ for indigenous accountability mechanisms
- Lost in translation: Family title in Fingo village, Grahamstown, Eastern Cape
- Land information as a tool for effective land administration and development
- Legal pluralism – The investor’s view
- Promises of future performance and informal-sector transfers of personal property: The example of Anglophone Cameroon
- Indigenous-law land rights: Constitutional imperatives and proprietary paradoxes