Through the lens of the disappearance' of a piece of land, this article analyses land relations in a Bangladeshi bastee (slum). The author builds an understanding of the local negotiation of ownership in an area where dakhal (forceful occupation) is the main starting point for the assessment of ownership. The property regime in the bastee emerges out of a web of relationships between different landlords, strongmen, elected officials and (local and national) politicians. These relations are not only crucial for maintaining existing dakhal patterns, but also for guaranteeing land sales, negotiating and settling disputes and, in the final instance, for negotiating power relations in the bastee itself
This study examines the impact of caste on slum communities’ access to urban land in Bangalore, Indi...
Drawing on two years of ethnographic research in the north-eastern borderlands of Bangladesh, this b...
Bangladesh is one of the most densely populated countries with immense pressure on agricultural land...
Through the lens of the disappearance' of a piece of land, this article analyses land relations in a...
This article argues for the need to take time into account when understanding land ownership in slum...
This article examines the issue of ongoing transnational tensions and disputes around land and prope...
Because of changes in some underlying factors, the land is increasingly becoming a source of conflic...
Studies have revealed intense competition over land in Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) of Bangladesh. T...
International audienceThis paper examines how a legal doctrine sanctioning land appropriation from a...
This paper considers the politics of land occupation in Bangladesh. Contentious politics have been c...
Access to resources is vital to peoples livelihoods in the rural and peri-urban areas in the Chittag...
This paper argues for a more context-specific understanding of dynamics of resistance to land dispos...
This thesis examines the major colonial and post-colonial land laws of Bangladesh and their relation...
Constructing religious difference as a national security threat, the Vested Property Act, whose lega...
In this paper I have made a tentative attempt at throwing light upon the relationship between landlo...
This study examines the impact of caste on slum communities’ access to urban land in Bangalore, Indi...
Drawing on two years of ethnographic research in the north-eastern borderlands of Bangladesh, this b...
Bangladesh is one of the most densely populated countries with immense pressure on agricultural land...
Through the lens of the disappearance' of a piece of land, this article analyses land relations in a...
This article argues for the need to take time into account when understanding land ownership in slum...
This article examines the issue of ongoing transnational tensions and disputes around land and prope...
Because of changes in some underlying factors, the land is increasingly becoming a source of conflic...
Studies have revealed intense competition over land in Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) of Bangladesh. T...
International audienceThis paper examines how a legal doctrine sanctioning land appropriation from a...
This paper considers the politics of land occupation in Bangladesh. Contentious politics have been c...
Access to resources is vital to peoples livelihoods in the rural and peri-urban areas in the Chittag...
This paper argues for a more context-specific understanding of dynamics of resistance to land dispos...
This thesis examines the major colonial and post-colonial land laws of Bangladesh and their relation...
Constructing religious difference as a national security threat, the Vested Property Act, whose lega...
In this paper I have made a tentative attempt at throwing light upon the relationship between landlo...
This study examines the impact of caste on slum communities’ access to urban land in Bangalore, Indi...
Drawing on two years of ethnographic research in the north-eastern borderlands of Bangladesh, this b...
Bangladesh is one of the most densely populated countries with immense pressure on agricultural land...