Affiliation:
1. Department of Urban Land Development and Management, C.U.D.E., Ethiopian Civil Service University, Addis Ababa P.O. Box 5648, Ethiopia
2. Department of Urban and Regional Planning, EiABC, Addis Ababa University, Addis Ababa P.O. Box 1176, Ethiopia
Abstract
Urban land acquisition is a fundamental precondition to sustaining the socio-economic livelihood of urban residents. In Ethiopia, with the high rate of peri-urbanization, the demand for urban land for various urban uses, such as housing development, is responded to by expropriating peri-urban landholdings from the farming community through paying compensation to the farmers. The paper highlights Ethiopia’s urbanization pace and the associated urban land acquisition scenarios, mainly for housing purposes. Thus, it aims to analyze the peri-urban land acquisition scenarios through the expropriation of peri-urban land holdings used for agricultural purposes in Bahir Dar and the associated adverse effect on the farming community. To address the intended aim, data were collected by interviewing senior officials, experts, and elder farm households of the study area who were more knowledgeable about the study issue. There were focus group discussions with selected farming communities, and an extended field observation was conducted intending to triangulate the data collected by other techniques. Moreover, the Geographic Information System (GIS) was utilized to analyze satellite images of Bahir Dar City to demonstrate the extent of peri-urban land conversion from 2011 to 2021. The result of this study revealed that there is a 7% urban population growth rate, which resulted in 8% of Bahir Dar being converted from peri-urban between the stated period, and hence a considerable size of land had been expropriated in the peri-urban areas of Bahir Dar with expropriation measures. This study exposed that the compensation for expropriated agricultural landholdings often fails to adequately account for the full range of livelihoods and economic activities that farmers engage in, leaving them struggling to adapt to urban life. The urban development in the study area of Bahir Dar is taking place by jeopardizing the livelihoods of the farming community, and the urban expansion is seen as a threat to them.
Reference77 articles.
1. UNDESA (2015). World Population Prospects, UNDESA.
2. UNEP, and UN-Habitat (2016). The ABC for Sustainable Cities: A Glossary for Policy Makers, UN-Habitat.
3. Challenges of Access to Land for Urban Housing in Sub-Saharan Africa;Arjjumend;J. Glob. Resour.,2018
4. UN-Habitat (2016). Urbanization and Development: Emerging Futures, UN-Habitat.
5. Africapolis: Understanding the Dynamics of Urbanization in Africa;Heinrigs;Field Actions Sci. Rep.,2020