American Sāmoan Land Tenure—Apportionment Of Communal Lands And The Road To Individually Owned Land Rights

Date
2019-08
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Brigham Young University–Hawaii
Volume
42
Number/Issue
1/2
Starting Page
75
Ending Page
98
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Abstract
Prior to 1800, all lands in American Sāmoa were native lands (Crocombe 1987; 14-18). Native (communal) lands were identified not by boundary markers or survey pegs but as specific tracts of large, medium, and small lands collectively owned and controlled by the āiga (family) within a nu'u (village) and demarcated by settlement, cultivation, and virgin bush lands where the natural features of rivers and hills were understood as boundary land markers (Meleisea 1987: 1-6). Family clans, descendants of family lines, and successors to the mātai (chief) title have a direct interest in the communal lands, because they are what would be considered in the Western context “part-owners” of communal lands. The powers and authority vested in mātai leadership over communal lands were (and are still currently) balanced between the state and local governance in the villages and districts. The senior mātai are stewards of the communal lands and serve the families by protecting the assets of the āiga.
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Kruse, L.-N. M. (2019). American Sāmoan Land Tenure—Apportionment Of Communal Lands And The Road To Individually Owned Land Rights. Pacific Studies, 42(1/2), 75–98.
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25 pages
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States
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