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IssueslandLandLibrary Resource
Displaying 5089 - 5100 of 6006

Kabul : Urban Land in Crisis

Reports & Research
May, 2013
Afghanistan

Urban Development - Urban Housing Public Sector Management and Reform Housing and Human Habitats Urban Development - Municipal Housing and Land Transport Economics Policy and Planning Communities and Human Settlements Public Sector Development Transport

Institutional Change on First Nations: Examining factors influencing First Nations Adoption of the Framework Agreement on First Nation Land Management

Reports & Research
December, 2012
Australia
British Indian Ocean Territory
United States of America

In 1999 the Canadian Federal government passed the First Nations Land Management Act, ratifying the Framework Agreement on First Nation Land Management signed by the government and 14 original signatory First Nations in 1996. This Agreement allows First Nations to opt out of the 34 land code provisions of the Indian Act and develop individual land codes, and has been promoted as a means of increasing First Nation autonomy and facilitating economic growth and development on reserve lands.

Assessment of Land Governance in Bihar

Reports & Research
August, 2015
Norway

Land governance can be briefly described as how property rights to land, for groups or individuals, are defined, enforced, can be exchanged, and transformed. Land governance is argued to be a key to sustainable development and poverty reduction. In India, as well as in Bihar, land has enormous economic, social, and symbolic relevance. The present paper is an attempt to understand the issue of land governance from different perspective.

Land policies and evolving farm structures in transition countries

Reports & Research
March, 2017
Norway

The authors review the role of land policies in the evolving farm structure of transition countries in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). They show how different policies for land property rights, degrees of control of land rental and sale markets, and procedures for restructuring former collective or state farms resulted in significantly different farm structures in CEE countries compared with those in the CIS.

Transition to Sustainable Tropical Land Management

Reports & Research
November, 2014
Benin
Cameroon
Kenya
Philippines

Following the example of Tiffen et al. on Machakos, Kenya, new macro-based evidence was collected in Machakos, the neighbouring Kitui district and in Benin, Cameroon and the Philippines, to assess the factors à la Boserup, inducing transitions towards sustainable land management, such as terracing, stone bands etc. We find that relative scarcity of land can be seen to induce technical changes, in the sense of Hayami & Ruttan, that correspond to the new relative scarcity, making higher man-land ratios the optimal choice.

The price of empowerment : experimental evidence on land titling in Tanzania

Reports & Research
July, 2016
Tanzania

This paper reports on a randomized field experiment that uses price incentives to address economic and gender inequality in land tenure formalization. During the 1990s and 2000s, nearly two dozen African countries proposed de jure land reforms extending access to formal, freehold land tenure to millions of poor households. Many of these reforms stalled. Titled land remains the de facto preserve of wealthy households and, within households, men.

Forest Based Industry and Forest Land Management in India

Reports & Research
May, 2015
Australia
Belgium
Canada
India
British Indian Ocean Territory
United States of America

The paper highlights that land degradation in India has been approaching a crisis level in spite of repeated emphasis on wasteland development and existence of apex level organisations for that purpose. One reason has been the policy emphasis on ownership and control rather than appropriate management of the land. It is set in the context of i) the 1988 Forest Policy, and ii) the recent amends to the Forest Conservation Act.