3.8 Article

Property rights and conflict in Gomoa Nsuaem, Ghana's central region

Journal

COGENT ARTS & HUMANITIES
Volume 10, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS AS
DOI: 10.1080/23311983.2023.2223412

Keywords

Property rights; land dispute; land ownership; reinvention of tradition; Central Region; Ghana; >

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This paper examines the conflict between the Twidan and Agona royal lineages in Gomoa Nsuaem resulting from contestation over property rights. The author argues that Odikro Otenyi Kwaku reinvented tradition to benefit himself by selling Twidan Clan's Otopaako Lands to the Agona Clan. This led to the loss of the indigenous concept of land ownership that was beneficial for the entire clan.
This paper examines how contestation over property rights in Gomoa Nsuaem created conflict between the Twidan and Agona royal lineages in the community. The article employs archival, secondary and oral sources to critically clarify that Odikro Otenyi Kwaku of Gomoa Nsuaem reinvented tradition to satisfy his own parochial interests by selling off large tracts of Gomoa Nsuaem land popularly known as Otopaako Lands belonging to the Twidan Clan to Mankrado Kwaku Annor of the Agona clan as a result of his profligate and lecherous lifestyle. Hence the indigenous concept of land ownership beneficial for the entire clan was lost to the Twidan people.

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