Larbi, Wordsworth OdamiAntwi, AdarkwahOlomolaiye, Paul2008-06-022008-06-022004Land Use Policy, 21(2): 115-1270264837710.1016/j.landusepol.2003.09.004http://hdl.handle.net/2436/29333Co-author Dr. Larbi was seconded as a Visiting Research Fellow from the Ministry of Lands and Forestry in Ghana and co-author Dr. Antwi was subsequently recruited by the DFID and the Government of Ghana to play a leading role in a £3M DFID project examining land holding titles by Ghanaian Chiefs.Compulsory land acquisition powers have been used extensively in Ghana since colonial times, as the main means of the state's access to land for development. The underlying principle is supremacy of the state over people and their private property, and is aimed at providing land for public and social amenities, correcting economic and social inefficiencies in private market operations and providing greater equity and social justice in the distribution of land. The paper analyses compulsory acquisition practice in Ghana in the light of these principles. It argues that few of the presumed principles have been met. Rather compulsory land acquisition has resulted in adverse socio-economic consequences including in landlessness, poverty and heightened tension in state-community relationship. The paper advocates for a new legal and institutional environment for employing compulsory acquisition powers.enLand usePublic interestPolitical economyLand policiesLand rightsLand tenureGhanaSub-Saharan AfricaAfricaEconomic developmentGovernment policySocioeconomicsCompulsory purchaseCompensationDivestitureProperty rightsCompulsory Land Acquisition in Ghana - Policy and PraxisJournal articleLand Use Policy