PAST AND PRESENT LAND TENURE SYSTEMS IN ALBANIA: PATRILINEAL, PATRIARCHAL, FAMILY-CENTERED
Rachel WHEELER
ltc-uw@facstaff.wisc.edu
Working paper, no. 13. Albania series
May 1998, 35 pages; Adobe Acrobat pdf 169K bytes
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ABSTRACT: This paper attempts to evaluate whether Albanian rural social
structure has changed to the extent that individual rights and protection of those rights
have become important policy questions. If the evaluation suggests that rural Albanians
retain the set of family-oriented norms and beliefs that are based primarily on
patriarchalism and patrilineal inheritance, we must address the following questions: How
appropriate is the mixture of western law that emulates individualistic notions of
property rights with the customary family-tenure system of rural Albania? What are the
likely problems that could emerge during the transition given a potential conflict between
family notions of ownership and individual notions of ownership? This paper discusses five
broad issues: the contemporary importance of family ownership, the role of the patriarch,
the contemporary inheritance procedures, the vulnerability of specific groups of women,
and the structure of the Albanian family.
Keywords: Land tenure -- Albania; Right of property -- Albania; Inheritance and
succession -- Albania; Albania -- Social conditions
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