Abstract

Purpose: This study aimed to assess the role of selected land governance institutions in managing land conflicts in Uganda.
 Methodology: A desk research was adopted given that it was purely based on secondary data.
 Findings: The outcomes suggest that although a variety of mechanisms are available, ad-hoc mediation is key is resolving land conflicts in Uganda.
 Conclusion: The study concludes that government strengthen ad-hoc mediation as well as making them more formal in land conflict management.
 Recommendations: From the study, it is encouraged that local council court members be periodically trained in conflict management; that government advocates, trains, and considers better facilitation for ad-hoc mediators to make them more effective.

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