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Property rights and the production of the urban built environment in Zambia

This study investigated the phenomenon whereby settlements with ostensibly similar socio- economic status exhibited significantly different physical outcomes, such as in the quality of houses, spatial arrangements and available services. The study investigated three related questions. Firstly, given...

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Main Author: Munshifwa, Ephraim Kabunda
Other Authors: Mooya, Manya
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Construction Economics and Management 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Munshifwa, Ephraim Kabunda
author2 Mooya, Manya
author_browse Mooya, Manya
Munshifwa, Ephraim Kabunda
author_facet Mooya, Manya
Munshifwa, Ephraim Kabunda
author_sort Munshifwa, Ephraim Kabunda
collection Thesis
description This study investigated the phenomenon whereby settlements with ostensibly similar socio- economic status exhibited significantly different physical outcomes, such as in the quality of houses, spatial arrangements and available services. The study investigated three related questions. Firstly, given the similarity in the levels of incomes, what is the relationship between property rights and physical development outcomes in low income settlements? Secondly, what are the underlying mechanisms and processes by which these physical developments are produced? Thirdly, what is the relationship between formal and informal institutions and organisations in the production of the built environment? Corresponding to these questions were three hypotheses. The first hypothesis was that, at any given level of average incomes, different strengths of property rights have differential effects on physical development outcomes. The second hypothesis was that different property rights are associated with different mechanisms and processes in the physical development process and thirdly that situations of extra-legal property rights require State mechanisms in the production of the built environment. Using a theoretical, conceptual and analytical framework provided by the new institutional economics, the study employed the comparative institutional analysis methodology to determine the influence of three types of property rights on the production of the built environment in Zambia. These rights were categorised as informal, semi-legal and legalised, and are to be found respectively in Mindolo North, Chipata and Ipusukilo, three settlements in Kitwe selected as case studies. Empirical data was collected using household surveys, focus group discussions, semi-structured interviews and observations. The study finds that stronger property rights are associated with better quality physical development outcomes. Furthermore, the study finds that different types of property rights are associated with different mechanisms and processes for the production of the built environment. Finally, the study finds that where property rights are extra- illegal or informal, successful development requires that there be facilitative interaction between formal institutions of the State at one hand, and informal institutions and organisations at the other.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
publishDateRange 2015
publishDateSort 2015
publisher Department of Construction Economics and Management
publisherStr Department of Construction Economics and Management
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/15572 Property rights and the production of the urban built environment in Zambia Munshifwa, Ephraim Kabunda Mooya, Manya Construction Economics and Management This study investigated the phenomenon whereby settlements with ostensibly similar socio- economic status exhibited significantly different physical outcomes, such as in the quality of houses, spatial arrangements and available services. The study investigated three related questions. Firstly, given the similarity in the levels of incomes, what is the relationship between property rights and physical development outcomes in low income settlements? Secondly, what are the underlying mechanisms and processes by which these physical developments are produced? Thirdly, what is the relationship between formal and informal institutions and organisations in the production of the built environment? Corresponding to these questions were three hypotheses. The first hypothesis was that, at any given level of average incomes, different strengths of property rights have differential effects on physical development outcomes. The second hypothesis was that different property rights are associated with different mechanisms and processes in the physical development process and thirdly that situations of extra-legal property rights require State mechanisms in the production of the built environment. Using a theoretical, conceptual and analytical framework provided by the new institutional economics, the study employed the comparative institutional analysis methodology to determine the influence of three types of property rights on the production of the built environment in Zambia. These rights were categorised as informal, semi-legal and legalised, and are to be found respectively in Mindolo North, Chipata and Ipusukilo, three settlements in Kitwe selected as case studies. Empirical data was collected using household surveys, focus group discussions, semi-structured interviews and observations. The study finds that stronger property rights are associated with better quality physical development outcomes. Furthermore, the study finds that different types of property rights are associated with different mechanisms and processes for the production of the built environment. Finally, the study finds that where property rights are extra- illegal or informal, successful development requires that there be facilitative interaction between formal institutions of the State at one hand, and informal institutions and organisations at the other. 2015-12-04T17:59:09Z 2015-12-04T17:59:09Z 2015 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15572 eng application/pdf Department of Construction Economics and Management Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Construction Economics and Management
Munshifwa, Ephraim Kabunda
Property rights and the production of the urban built environment in Zambia
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Property rights and the production of the urban built environment in Zambia
title_full Property rights and the production of the urban built environment in Zambia
title_fullStr Property rights and the production of the urban built environment in Zambia
title_full_unstemmed Property rights and the production of the urban built environment in Zambia
title_short Property rights and the production of the urban built environment in Zambia
title_sort property rights and the production of the urban built environment in zambia
topic Construction Economics and Management
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15572
work_keys_str_mv AT munshifwaephraimkabunda propertyrightsandtheproductionoftheurbanbuiltenvironmentinzambia