Skip to main content

page search

Issues customary tenure related Blog post
There are 831 content items of different types and languages related to customary tenure on the Land Portal.
Displaying 37 - 48 of 59

India’s SVAMITVA scheme: a public value perspective directs attention to inclusive innovation for rural property formalisation

16 November 2020
Serene Ho
Pranab Choudhury

Last month, India’s Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, issued the first 0.1 million Rural Property Cards (RPCs) to communities across more than 763 villages in six states in rural India under the SVAMITVA scheme.

Three reasons to invest in land tenure security

21 October 2020
Harold Liversage
Giulia Barbanente

For rural people, especially low-income rural people, land and livelihood are one and the same. Access to land means the opportunity to earn a decent income and achieve food and nutrition security, and it can also pave the way for access to social benefits such as health care and education. A lack of secure land access, on the other hand, can disempower rural people and expose them to the combined threats of poverty, hunger and conflict.

Securing Forest Tenure: GLA Partners to Pilot Forest Tenure Assessment Tool in three Countries

26 February 2020
Malcolm Childress

Forests are critically important for many of the world’s poor who depend on them for food, income, medicine and building materials. As such, forests are a nexus of broadly held policy goals such as poverty reduction, economic growth, conservation and climate change. Most forests in the developing world are governed, in practice, through community-based tenure systems.

“This plot is not for sale!”: Land Administration and Land Disputes in Uganda

06 November 2019
Teddy Kisembo

“This plot is not for sale” are the six words you will find, marked on a lot of properties and plots of land in Uganda. The words are meant to ward off quack land or property brokers and conmen. Most of the cases handled in courts in Uganda, and Kampala in particular, are fraud-related cases (like selling land while the true owners are away using counterfeit titles) and land transaction fraud (when fake land titles are obtained and sadly some officers in the land registry are involved).

The Land Reform Agenda for Kenya Webinar: A Summary

24 October 2018
stacey.zammit@landportal.info

There is no doubt that land use and reforms are at the heart of Kenya’s political and economic future stability. In Kenya in particular, land has a central position in Kenya’s social, economic and political history. An estimated 75% of the country’s population depends on land for their livelihoods, making the ownership, management and control of the resource of great importance. Land is an enabler to support manufacturing, access to affordable and decent housing, universal health care, food security and nutrition.