A comparative overview on agricultural contracts in Sudan
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
Sudan, like other African nations, has experienced challenges related to land ownership, aggravated
by its previous status as the largest country in Africa before South Sudan’s secession.
Traditionally, land in Sudan has been held collectively by tribes, managed by chiefs or tribal leaders
through customary regulations. In this system, an individual’s right to land is derived from
their membership in the community or tribe. Specific areas for communal use are exclusively
reserved under customary law, where individuals can access them as a shared resource. This
concept aligns with the notion of a native common good in modern terms, as described by the
economic analysis of law, where ownership rights prevent individuals from excluding others. The
right to exclude others does not apply in this case. These customary traditions remained mostly
unaffected by colonial and post-colonial governments, which introduced a separate land tenure
system based on the state’s authority to allocate land. Alongside these customs, Islam, as a religious
faith, also played a significant role, providing principles and regulations that intertwined
with customary traditions to form a binding body of law. However, the religious rules themselves
are only one component of the living law, whose content is shaped through the interaction with
customary practices. Official land law in Sudan, influenced by colonial practices, has undergone
modifications under successive governments but remains fundamentally rooted in the colonial
land laws. These laws were initially implemented to confiscate large land areas for commercial
farming, particularly cotton production, and to regulate urban residency in support of colonial regime
security. One of the fundamental issues related to rural land tenure stems from the principle
introduced by the British colonial power in 1898, which assumes that unregistered land is owned
by the government unless proven otherwise. Considering the premises, the purpose of this contribution
is to analyse the land laws in Sudan and, in particular, the main type of agrarian contracts.
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Piccinelli, Gian M. 2023. A comparative overview on agricultural contracts in Sudan. Pravovedenie 67 (3): 272–283. https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu25.2023.302