Following South Sudanese independence in 2011, land reform became a major aspect of state building, partly to address historical injustices
and partly to avoid future conflicts around land. In the process, land became a trigger for conflicts, sometimes between communities with
no histories of “ethnic conflict.” Drawing on cases in two rural areas in Yei River County in South Sudan, this paper shows that contradictions in the existing legal frameworks on land are mainly to blame for those conflicts. These contradictions are influenced, in turn, by the largely top-down approach to state building, which has tended to neglect changes in society and regarding land resulting from colonialism and civil wars.
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