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The impacts of large-scale land acquisition for communal landholders: a case study of Atebubu-Amantin municipality, Ghana

The study assesses the impacts of Large-Scale Land Acquisition (LSLA) for communal landholders in the Atebubu-Amantin Municipality of Ghana. It employs a combination of Accumulation by Dispossession (ABD) and Sustainable Livelihood Framework (SLF) in analysing the impacts. Using these two frameworks...

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Main Author: Sarfo, Kwasi
Other Authors: Chitonge, Horman
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: African Studies 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Sarfo, Kwasi
author2 Chitonge, Horman
author_browse Chitonge, Horman
Sarfo, Kwasi
author_facet Chitonge, Horman
Sarfo, Kwasi
author_sort Sarfo, Kwasi
collection Thesis
description The study assesses the impacts of Large-Scale Land Acquisition (LSLA) for communal landholders in the Atebubu-Amantin Municipality of Ghana. It employs a combination of Accumulation by Dispossession (ABD) and Sustainable Livelihood Framework (SLF) in analysing the impacts. Using these two frameworks makes it possible to link LSLA to the broader history of neoliberal capital accumulation processes, the dispossession it engenders and how these manifest in the local context to produce impacts. The study argues that the recent LSLA is a neoliberal capitalist accumulation strategy in response to the triple crisis of 20072008 that dispossesses communal landholders of their land, worsens their vulnerability, affects livelihood assets and livelihood strategies, and leads to negative impacts. The study employed a mixed method research design in data collection, analysis and presentation of the findings. It relied on in-depth interviews, focus group discussions, household surveys, and participant observation in eliciting data. The main finding of the study is that LSLA in the study area has led to loss of income, food insecurity, tension, conflicts, and environmental degradation. Secondly, LSLA has resulted in dispossession and displacement, loss of access to natural resources, restrictions on movement and human rights abuse, without sustainable compensation. Thirdly, LSLA has contributed to some employment opportunities, socioeconomic infrastructure, and market access but these benefited only a few community members. Fourthly, the new coping and adaptive strategies of the affected people in response to LSLA has further exacerbated their vulnerability. The study concludes that although LSLA in the study area has generated some positive impacts for local communities, the negative impacts far outweigh the positive impacts. The study also concludes that the customary land tenure system, guidelines for LSLA and new land laws failed to secure the land rights of communal landholders. Beyond confirming findings of studies that reported negative impacts of LSLA, this study demonstrates the differences in impacts at different stages of the investment projects that were missed by studies conducted in the initial stages. Additionally, the study provides further empirical evidence on coping and adaptive strategies of the affected communities, and gender and generational impact dynamics that have received limited scholarly attention in LSLA debate. More so, by combining ABD and SLF theorisation to capture the nuances of LSLA, this study provides new theoretical and conceptual insights. Akin to studies that have reported negative impacts, the findings of this study call for circumspection in promoting LSLA in Africa and beyond, as its long-term outcomes for communal landholders do not look promising.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:04.194Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42705 The impacts of large-scale land acquisition for communal landholders: a case study of Atebubu-Amantin municipality, Ghana Sarfo, Kwasi Chitonge, Horman accumulation by dispossession sustainable livelihood framework land acquisition The study assesses the impacts of Large-Scale Land Acquisition (LSLA) for communal landholders in the Atebubu-Amantin Municipality of Ghana. It employs a combination of Accumulation by Dispossession (ABD) and Sustainable Livelihood Framework (SLF) in analysing the impacts. Using these two frameworks makes it possible to link LSLA to the broader history of neoliberal capital accumulation processes, the dispossession it engenders and how these manifest in the local context to produce impacts. The study argues that the recent LSLA is a neoliberal capitalist accumulation strategy in response to the triple crisis of 20072008 that dispossesses communal landholders of their land, worsens their vulnerability, affects livelihood assets and livelihood strategies, and leads to negative impacts. The study employed a mixed method research design in data collection, analysis and presentation of the findings. It relied on in-depth interviews, focus group discussions, household surveys, and participant observation in eliciting data. The main finding of the study is that LSLA in the study area has led to loss of income, food insecurity, tension, conflicts, and environmental degradation. Secondly, LSLA has resulted in dispossession and displacement, loss of access to natural resources, restrictions on movement and human rights abuse, without sustainable compensation. Thirdly, LSLA has contributed to some employment opportunities, socioeconomic infrastructure, and market access but these benefited only a few community members. Fourthly, the new coping and adaptive strategies of the affected people in response to LSLA has further exacerbated their vulnerability. The study concludes that although LSLA in the study area has generated some positive impacts for local communities, the negative impacts far outweigh the positive impacts. The study also concludes that the customary land tenure system, guidelines for LSLA and new land laws failed to secure the land rights of communal landholders. Beyond confirming findings of studies that reported negative impacts of LSLA, this study demonstrates the differences in impacts at different stages of the investment projects that were missed by studies conducted in the initial stages. Additionally, the study provides further empirical evidence on coping and adaptive strategies of the affected communities, and gender and generational impact dynamics that have received limited scholarly attention in LSLA debate. More so, by combining ABD and SLF theorisation to capture the nuances of LSLA, this study provides new theoretical and conceptual insights. Akin to studies that have reported negative impacts, the findings of this study call for circumspection in promoting LSLA in Africa and beyond, as its long-term outcomes for communal landholders do not look promising. 2026-01-27T13:21:11Z 2026-01-27T13:21:11Z 2025 2026-01-27T13:19:03Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42705 en eng application/pdf African Studies Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle accumulation by dispossession
sustainable livelihood framework
land acquisition
Sarfo, Kwasi
The impacts of large-scale land acquisition for communal landholders: a case study of Atebubu-Amantin municipality, Ghana
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title The impacts of large-scale land acquisition for communal landholders: a case study of Atebubu-Amantin municipality, Ghana
title_full The impacts of large-scale land acquisition for communal landholders: a case study of Atebubu-Amantin municipality, Ghana
title_fullStr The impacts of large-scale land acquisition for communal landholders: a case study of Atebubu-Amantin municipality, Ghana
title_full_unstemmed The impacts of large-scale land acquisition for communal landholders: a case study of Atebubu-Amantin municipality, Ghana
title_short The impacts of large-scale land acquisition for communal landholders: a case study of Atebubu-Amantin municipality, Ghana
title_sort impacts of large scale land acquisition for communal landholders a case study of atebubu amantin municipality ghana
topic accumulation by dispossession
sustainable livelihood framework
land acquisition
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42705
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