The limitations of state regulation of land delivery processes in Gaborone, Botswana

Type Journal Article - International Development Planning Review
Title The limitations of state regulation of land delivery processes in Gaborone, Botswana
Author(s)
Volume 28
Issue 2
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2006
Page numbers 209-234
URL http://www.africabib.org/rec.php?RID=P00028670
Abstract
This paper assesses the strengths and weaknesses of a state-led land delivery process in Gaborone,
Botswana, in particular the extent to which such a process enables the poor to access land with secure
tenure. The paper observes that, despite its efforts, the government has been unable to supply suffi cient
urban land to satisfy demand, largely because of three interrelated factors: (i) the changing and speculative
nature of demands made by middle- and high-income benefi ciaries; (ii) the evolution of a ‘culture of
entitlement’; and (iii) government reluctance to address the land and housing needs of the poor. Consequently,
while the unattainable land demands made by the rich have resulted in a sprawling albeit wellplanned
city, the poor have utilised their collective agency to stake their claims by ‘illegally’ occupying,
fi rst, state land within the town and, later, customary land in peri-urban areas. These contradictions and
contestations have, in the long run, forced the government to rethink, revise and rewrite its policies and
approaches to urban land supply and development processes, although poor people continue to lose out
in the struggles over policy, state land allocation and increasingly commercialised processes of informal
peri-urban land subdivision.

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