Contents
Post-socialist
Property Rights and Wrongs in Albania: An Ethnography of Agrarian
Change
Clarissa de Waal
In
Communist Albania privately owned land was eliminated. Decollectivisation
procedures began in 1991. This ethnography focuses on post-socialist
property relations with respect to ex-cooperative land, forest and
partially distributed state farm land. In northern Albania ex-cooperative
land was privatised according to customary law rather than state
decree. This was chiefly for practical reasons, but symbolic reasons
played a role, too. The procedure was widely perceived as just;
agreed by customary rules and tolerated by the state. The forest
remained state owned though customary usage rights in the forest
were reasserted by villagers. State indifference to large-scale
illegal felling has resulted in massive forest destruction. The
status of ex-state farm land is anomalous, providing a fertile arena
for electioneering politicians wooing squatters and painful insecurity
for large numbers of highland village migrants. Post-socialist property
relations in Albania have been characterised by government laissez-faire
alternating with interventionism and corrupt practices. The population
has had to resort to 'do-it-yourself' tactics. The oft-repeated
cry: 'There is no state, there is no law' - ska shtet, ska ligj
encapsulates the view from the ground. |