URBAN LAND ACQUISITION AND SOCIAL JUSTICE IN ETHIOPIA
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Abstract
As urban land could be used for manifold purposes, urban residents look for such
land enthusiastically to serve their enormously diverse interests. Thus, urban land
use laws and policies should be flexible, apt and transparent to respond to such
various and complex land demands. An inflexible form of land transfer and
management system may drive some section of the society out of the land deal and
an extremely flexible urban land permission and use system could result in a
pervasive corruption and that in turn could lead to bad governance. In this work,
the author argues that the existing urban land acquisition system of Ethiopia has
resulted in social injustice by denying the poor from access to urban land; and
creating discriminatory environment while enforcing the new lease system.
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