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    Land Law Reform: A Comparative Analysis of South Africa's Labour Tenancy Contract and Malawi's Tenant Worker's Contract


    Banda, Sibo (2006) Land Law Reform: A Comparative Analysis of South Africa's Labour Tenancy Contract and Malawi's Tenant Worker's Contract. Oxford University Commonwealth Law Journal, 6. pp. 201-225. ISSN 1472-9342

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    Abstract

    This article undertakes a comparative analysis of the South African labour tenancy contract and the Malawian tenant worker’s contract in the context of the land law reform programme instituted in both countries. Historically, both contracts represent mechanisms for access to otherwise inaccessible land. They have been devoid of proprietary rights and secure tenure. However, South Africa, through its land reform programme, has adopted a robust approach towards the infusion of proprietary rights and secure tenure into the labour tenancy contract. The South African approach adjusts ‘the relative positions’ of the farmland owner and the labour tenant, as it moves away from a permits- or personal-rights-based approach to a proprietary, in rem (real) rights approach to land access. Malawi’s land reform programme does not include similar provisions for the tenant worker’s contract. Malawi’s land law reform must undertake similar corrective and appropriate action.

    Item Type: Article
    Keywords: Land Law Reform; South Africa's Labour Tenancy Contract; Malawi's Tenant Worker's Contract;
    Academic Unit: Faculty of Social Sciences > Law
    Item ID: 2148
    Depositing User: Dr. Sibo Banda
    Date Deposited: 04 Oct 2010 11:22
    Journal or Publication Title: Oxford University Commonwealth Law Journal
    Publisher: Hart Publishing
    Refereed: Yes
    URI:
      Use Licence: This item is available under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial Share Alike Licence (CC BY-NC-SA). Details of this licence are available here

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