Contents
Conflicting
Concepts: Contested Land Relations in North-western Vietnam
Thomas Sikor
In
villages of north-western Vietnam land allocation provided a window
in which different conceptions of land relations came to light.
Villagers resisted the implementation of key elements of the new
land legislation, though the new law purported to extend peopleís
control. Their resistance manifested a fundamental disjuncture between
the exclusive and territorial concept of land rights promoted in
the new land law and peopleís lived land relations. They
refused to give up the substance of land relations that had proven
useful before collectivisation, under collective agriculture and
again in the initial years of decollectivisation. Peopleís
reactions highlight how post-socialist land reforms provoke their
own forms of resistance. Villagers negotiate the reforms in conflicts
over resources and authority as well as over the very concept of
landed property. This article examines the nature of these conflicts,
explores their linkages with socialist and post-socialist land legislation,
and relates them to the larger literature on post-socialist property
relations.
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