Collaborative autoethnography and reclaiming an African episteme:investigating “customary” ownership of natural resources

Abonga, Francis; Atingo, Jacky; Awachango, Jacob; Denis, Akena; Hopwood, JulianORCID logo; James, Ocitti; Kinyera, Opiyo Dick; Lajul, Susan; Lucky, Auma; and Okello, Joseph (2024) Collaborative autoethnography and reclaiming an African episteme:investigating “customary” ownership of natural resources. African Studies Review, 67 (2). 416 - 430. ISSN 0002-0206
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Collaborative autoethnography can function as a means of reclaiming certain African realities that have been co-opted by colonial epistemes and language. This can be significant in very concrete ways: northern Uganda is suffering a catastrophic loss of tree cover, much of which is taking place on the collective family landholdings that academia and the development sector have categorized as “customary land.” A collaboration by ten members of such landholding families, known as the Acholi Land Lab, explores what “customary ownership” means to them and their relatives, with a view to understanding what may be involved in promoting sustainable domestic use of natural resources, including trees.

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