Abstract

According to the current land policy of Ethiopia, rural households are legally allowed to access agricultural lands. Nonetheless, the difficulty of rural population in accessing farmlands makes controversial authenticity of this land tenure to solve problems of household farmland access. This study aimed at assessing the effects of the current land tenure on augmenting household farmland access in Ethiopia. The study followed a mixed-methods research design to investigate the variables in the study. Thus, data were collected through a survey questionnaire, focus group discussion and interviews between May and June 2019. For data analysis, both descriptive and inferential statistics methods were employed. Consequently, study results indicated that the mean farmland size per household was 1.59 ha and government land allocation accounted for 41.9%. The farmland accesses of households headed by persons below 35 years were 13% and that of all female-headed households was 23.2%. It also showed that there were illegal farmland accesses via furtive farmland purchasing. On top of this, 63% of respondents perceived that the current land tenure was not a good rule. The regression analysis showed that the number of oxen, total crop production; annual income, education, and credit access were determinants of household farmland size. In conclusion, farmland scare areas in Ethiopia like Arsi zone have problems of deficient government land allocation, as well as unforeseen illicit farmland transactions. Given augmenting household farmland access, the study recommended that female-headed households have to be empowered and younger-headed households should be encouraged to enhancing their farmland accesses. The farming community should affirm to legal land regulations for maintaining their tenure arrangements. The local government should work according to land rules to liquidate illicit land markets. The national government should mitigate imbalanced farmland access by enforcing land rule acts such as land redistribution and reallocation with the consultation of the people. All level governments should strictly control alarming illegal changes of farmlands to urban areas by illicit land transactions.

Highlights

  • Land tenure is a key concept in land reform and influences measures given to improving land management (Chitsike, 2003). Bazga (2013) substantiates that land tenure studies are all to bringing into play the legal, social, economic, and political aspects of people

  • A review of literature in this study proves that various factors affect household farmland access in addition to the land tenure of the country

  • Results indicated that demographic characteristics of sampled households such as sex, age, marital status, household size, and education

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Summary

Introduction

Land tenure is a key concept in land reform and influences measures given to improving land management (Chitsike, 2003). Bazga (2013) substantiates that land tenure studies are all to bringing into play the legal, social, economic, and political aspects of people. Bazga (2013) substantiates that land tenure studies are all to bringing into play the legal, social, economic, and political aspects of people. Simbizi et al (2014) comment western-oriented economic approaches of land tenure issues do not ally with many tenure studies in developing countries’ contexts. Holden and Ghebru (2016) confirm that their dissimilarities contribute to deviations in the field that makes land tenure studies more complex. This study was conceived to be done in Ethiopia mainly for the country suffers from the problem of rural households’ farmland access. The problem seems that it resulted from the nation’s enduring ambivalent land tenure transformations for a longer time till these days despite its larger agricultural population (Crewett and Korf, 2008)

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