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IssueslandLandLibrary Resource
Displaying 3337 - 3348 of 6006

Negotiating rights: access to land in the cotton zone, Burkina Faso

December, 2000
Burkina Faso
Sub-Saharan Africa

The paper examines how derived rights have evolved through settlement, loan, rental or purchase contracts and how these arrangements have developed as a result of national policy and socio-economic history. It goes on to examine how the unique circumstances of "established" and "pioneer" farming areas show differing patterns of change in arrangements over time.

The importance of land tenure to poverty eradication and sustainable development in Africa: Summary of findings

December, 1996
Sub-Saharan Africa

This paper draws out the key links between land tenure and poverty eradication. The author argues that in countries where land distribution remains highly inequitable, effectively designed and targeted, it could be a key component of anti-poverty strategies, but significant complementary measures, notably agrarian support services, are also required to achieve real impacts, together with investments in employment and economic diversification.

Public overseas investments: ensuring respect for and protecting legitimate land tenure rights: rapid evidence assessment

Reports & Research
December, 2014
Africa
Guatemala
Cambodia
Afghanistan

This rapid evidence assessment (REA) investigates how public overseas investments supported by developed country governments respect legitimate land tenure rights, especially in countries without a strong system for protecting existing tenure rights. The REA assesses material from the limited number of studies (20) available about donor-supported investment projects involving land. Most are from African countries, but the evidence also includes cases from Afghanistan, Guatemala and Cambodia.

Land reform in Zimbabwe – good for poor black farmers?

December, 2002

Zimbabwe’s fast-track land reform has had a bad press. Reports of violence and intimidation have obscured the reality that formal procedures used to settle black farmers in model villages bear a striking resemblance to earlier colonial procedures. Whilst colonial myths about African farmers as subsistence oriented and inefficient live on, evidence from south-eastern Zimbabwe suggests that the reforms have benefited some poor black farmers

Kailash sacred landscape conservation initiative – Feasibility assessment report

December, 2010

The Kailash Sacred Landscape (KSL) spreads across a vast region that includes remote portions of the Tibet Autonomous Region of China (TAR China) and contiguous areas of Nepal and India. This area is historically, ecologically, and culturally interconnected; it is the source of four of Asia’s most important rivers, and at the heart of this landscape is the sacred Mount Kailash, revered by millions of people in Asia and throughout the world.

Wild resources theme paper (sustainable livelihoods)

December, 2000
Botswana
Mozambique
South Africa
Zimbabwe
Namibia
Sub-Saharan Africa

This paper provides background information on access to natural resources in Southern Africa. Case studies are used from Botswana, Mozambique, Namibia and South Africa, to explore customary rights and de facto access to a wide range of wild resources, in particular those of greatest importance to the rural poor.

Carrying capacity, rangeland degredation and livestock development for the communal rangelands of Botswana

December, 1992
Botswana
Sub-Saharan Africa

Recent arguments have stated that the new livestock development policy will carry a high social cost, that the reality of range degradation in Botswana has been ignored, and that there is no basis for assuming that de-stocking would decrease the productivity of rangeland.