On November 3, 2016, ESSP’s Hosaena Ghebru presented the latest research at EDRI on how the expectation of inherited land impacts young people’s decisions on migration and employment in rural Ethiopia.
Synopsis: Household perception and demand for better protection of land rights in Ethiopia
ESSP Research Note 52: by Hosaena Ghebru, Bethelhem Koru and Alemayehu Seyoum Taffesse. Synopsis of Working Paper 83. Abstract: This study assesses factors that explain households’ perceived land tenure insecurity and the demand for new formalization of land rights in Ethiopia.
Household perception and demand for better protection of land rights in Ethiopia
ESSP Working Paper 83, by Hosaena Ghebru, Bethelhem Koru, and Alemayehu Seyoum Taffesse. Abstract: The study assesses factors that explain households’ perceived tenure insecurity and the demand for new formalization of land rights in Ethiopia.
Household perception and demand for better land rights protection in the era of agricultural transformation in Ethiopia
Using data from the 2013 Agricultural growth program (AGP) survey of 7500 households from Ethiopia, this presentation at EDRI held on 15th April 2015, explores factors associated with demand for 2nd level land certification (SLLC). The 1st land certification program relied on the use of general boundaries, with no inclusion of a map or any […]
Do Limitations in Land Rights Transferability Influence Mobility Rates in Ethiopia?
ESSP II Working Paper 18 "Do Limitations in Land Rights Transferability Influence Mobility Rates in Ethiopia?" by Alan de Brauw and Valerie Muller. Abstract: Migration is considered a pathway out of poverty for many rural households in developing countries. National policies can discourage households from exploiting external employment opportunities through the distortion of capital markets. […]