Examining the dynamics of land tenure and agricultural and
non-agricultural resources in rural and peri-urban areas remains a grey area in
the scientific discourse. To fill this knowledge gap using a case study in
south-east Sierra Leone, qualitative data were acquired through key informant
interviews and focus group discussions, whilst quantitative data were acquired
through administering semi-structured questionnaires to 342 household heads who
had resided in the study areas over the past three decades. Statistical Package
for Social Sciences (SPSS Version 26) was used for data analysis, and logistic
regression and chi-square statistics were used to answer some key research
questions. The findings revealed that
land is mainly acquired by inheritance in rural areas, whilst in peri-urban
areas, it is mainly by purchase. Family members can have access to land with
the concurrence of the household head. Rice cultivated area is decreasing
alongside an increase in cocoa and oil palm cultivated area, and this is
attributable to the increase in access to land for cash crop production by
native and non-native investors. With changes in land use, households now
travel longer distances to access non-agricultural resources. There is a
significant relationship between access to land, control over land, and the
location of land, with crop production. An increase in access and control over
land, and the location of land in a rural area, increases crop production.
However, other variables like the size of land and the use of land demonstrated
no significant relationship with crop production. Our findings provide insights
that would benefit land use planning in an era of increasing population and
land demand.
Author(s) Details
Morrison K. Lahai
Institute of Geography and Development Studies, Njala University, Sierra
Leone.
Lamin R. Mansaray
Institute of Geography and Development Studies, Njala University, Sierra
Leone.
Victor T.S. Kabba
Institute of Geography and Development Studies, Njala University, Sierra
Leone.
Please see the book here :- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/crgese/v4/6569
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