Title of article
Development implications of colonial land and human settlement schemes in Cameroon
Author/Authors
Ambe J. Njoh، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages
17
From page
399
To page
415
Abstract
This article analyses the implications of colonial land-use policies for contemporary development efforts in Cameroon. The discussion draws extensively, but not exclusively, on the experience of five of the countryʹs urban centres, Douala, Yaounde, Bamenda, Buea and Tiko, in which some of the most notorious colonial land acquisition and land-use planning schemes were implemented. It is argued that the residual effects of these schemes significantly impede contemporary development efforts, particularly in the following areas, transportation, urbanization, resource distribution, food self-sufficiency, and tradition/culture. It is concluded that, despite the tendency on the part of the post-colonial leadership to vigorously maintain these policies, they were never designed with post-colonial development endeavours in mind. Rather, they were crafted specifically to promote colonial and imperial development objectives. Therefore, post-colonial authorities will do well to enact more innovative land-use legislation in concert with prevailing socio-economic conditions and development objectives.
Keywords
Cameroon , Colonial urban planning , Land-use planning , Human settlements
Journal title
HABITAT INTERNATIONAL
Serial Year
2002
Journal title
HABITAT INTERNATIONAL
Record number
748523
Link To Document