Family and Ethnic Land Conflicts and Food Security in Lyantonde Rural Sub County-Lyantonde District –Uganda
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Date
2022
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
American Research Journal of Humanities & Social Science (ARJHSS)
Abstract
The study examined family and ethnic land conflicts and food security in Lyantonde rural
subcounty Lyantonde district. Descriptive cross-sectional survey research design with mixed approaches of
datacollection and analysis was used. The study population comprised of community members, the RDC,
Policeofficers, political and civil leaders of villages in Lyantonde Sub County, members of district and sub
county landboard and a sample size of 391 respondents participated. Data was collected using semi
structuredquestionnaire and interview guide. Quantitative data collected data was analyzed by use of Statistical
Packagefor Social Sciences (SPSS) while qualitative data was analyzed by use of both thematic and content
analysis.
The study established that people in Lyantonde occupied Mailo land, customary land, Freehold and a few
onLeasehold land. Unresolved land ownership, incompatibility of cattle keeping with crop farming,
unclearboundaries, population growth were leading causes of family and ethnic land conflicts which have
culminatedinto death of animals, destruction of crops, killing of villagers, loss of originally owned land, reduced
foodproduction, reduction in income which have all affected food stability among conflicting families
andcommunity at large in the study area.The study established that there exist cases of land grabbing in
Lyantonderural sub county manifested through forceful evictions and dubious land deals though on a moderate
rate. Itwas revealed that land grabbing is majorly conducted by rich local private individuals and
statehouseoperatives due to the presence of absentee land lords, poor land tenure system, corruption, poverty,
connectionto statehouse and poor implementation of land laws leading into mass displacement of people,
landlessnesshence food insecurity. The study established that majority of the people living Lyantonde Rural Sub
County donot know land laws and had less trust in courts of law since they take a very long time with many
procedures togive judgment overland conflicts and are very corrupt. The study recommends that; alternative
source oflivelihoods should be provided to the people, traditional institutions should be strengthened, land
boundariesbetween clans or communities should clearly be defined, demarcated and documented and, also,
there should bestrong stakeholder collaboration in land administration(10 Italic)
Description
American Research Journal of Humanities & Social Science (ARJHSS)
Keywords
Ethnic, food security, land conflicts, Lyantonde, Uganda
Citation
www.arjhss.com