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Questioning de Soto: The Case of Uganda

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  • Porter, Raewyn Isabel Author_Email:

Abstract

The 1995 constitution vested land in the Citizens of Uganda. Accordingly, in 1998, the Parliament passed a law to re-regulate the myriad land relations accreted from past and contemporary de jure laws and de facto practices. The Land Act of 1998 manifests 100 years of contest over the land and governance in Uganda; a contest made contemporary by Hernando de Soto’s book (2000), The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else. This paper argues that governmentalities associated with land law articulate an unending teleology of development in which land has always been crucial. In sustaining the tradition from a past tradition to a modern future, an equivalence is constantly created and reaffirmed with what is and what ought to be. Imprisoned by the normative dualisms of past and future, is and ought, tradition and modern, orthodox discourse about land distorts “here and now†lived realities. Uganda’s route to formalization underscores an evolving process whereby the Land Act of 1998 affirmed what was inevitable. Yet implementation is proving slow and difficult.

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  • Porter, Raewyn Isabel Author_Email:, "undated". "Questioning de Soto: The Case of Uganda," Philippine Journal of Development pjd_2001_vol__xxviii_no__, Philippine Institute for Development Studies.
  • Handle: RePEc:phd:pjdevt:pjd_2001_vol__xxviii_no__2-c
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.62986/pjd2001.28.2c
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    1. Schick, Allen, 1998. "Why Most Developing Countries Should Not Try New Zealand's Reforms," The World Bank Research Observer, World Bank, vol. 13(1), pages 123-131, February.
    2. World Bank, 2000. "Philippines : Combating Corruption in the Philippines," World Bank Publications - Reports 15150, The World Bank Group.
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    1. Marc Wegerif & Mohamed Coulibaly & Hubert Ouedraogo, 2025. "Land Tenure Governance in the First Decades of the 21st Century: Progress, Challenges, and Lessons from 18 Countries," Land, MDPI, vol. 14(4), pages 1-22, March.

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