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The political economy of corruption and REDD+: Lessons from the Philippines’ pilot sites

Reports & Research
Setembro, 2014
Sudeste Asiático
Filipinas

Corruption is a continuing feature of the Philippines’ natural resource sectors. Given keen interest in the country’s REDD+ potential, it is useful to consider corruption risks related to REDD+ from a political economy perspective. This U4 Issue draws on fieldwork from two REDD+ pilot sites to assess current governance and anti-corruption safeguards related to benefit-sharing, land tenure rights for indigenous peoples, and private sector involvement. Many anti-corruption actions are in place in the pilot sites, but they are weakly embedded in social relations at the local level.

Ethiopia: Overview of corruption in land administration

Reports & Research
Agosto, 2014
Etiópia

mproving land governance is key in assuring that land resources can be enjoyed by all parts of the population. Donors can play an important role in combatting corruption in land administration and building a well-functioning land administration by both supporting domestic government efforts as well as engaging in international and multi-country initiatives. However, donors are advised by experts and civil society organisations to be mindful of the possible impact of their interventions on issues of land grabbing and forced relocations.

Ceasefire capitalism: military–private partnerships, resource concessions and military–state building in the Burma–China borderlands

Journal Articles & Books
Dezembro, 2011
Myanmar

Since ceasefire agreements were signed between the Burmese military government and ethnic political groups in the Burma–China borderlands in the early 1990s, violent waves of counterinsurgency development have replaced warfare to target politically-suspect, resource-rich, ethnic populated borderlands. The Burmese regime allocates land concessions in ceasefire zones as an explicit postwar military strategy to govern land and populations to produce regulated, legible, militarized territory.

Guião Técnico de CaVaTeCo 3 - Problemas Frequentes na Delimitação de Terra

Manuals & Guidelines
Julho, 2018
Moçambique

Uma equipe de campo que delimita as parcelas familiares da abordagem da Cadeia de Valor de Terra Comunitária (CaVaTeCo) inclui 2 ou 3 pessoas, trabalhando com membros da comunidade. A equipe deve ser capaz de implementar tarefas chaves, como:

• Gestão: Mantenha a comunicação entre a equipe, o dono da terra e as testemunhas da comunidade (como proprietários de parcelas vizinhas e líderes locais), garantindo que todos concordem com os limites;

Guião Técnico de CaVaTeCo 2 : Passos de Delimitação de Parcelas Familiares

Manuals & Guidelines
Julho, 2018
Moçambique

A Cadeia de Valor de Terras Comunitárias (CaVaTeCo) é uma abordagem que oferece uma fundação para uma melhor gestão de terras e recursos naturais comunitários num contexto de grandes investimentos baseados em uso da terra em Moçambique. A CaVaTeCo forma a base conceitual do Projecto LEGEND, implementado nos Distritos de Namarroi e Ile de Moçambique na província da Zambézia pela ORAM e Terra Firma.

Relevance of the World Social Forum to the Kenyan Situation

Policy Papers & Briefs
Janeiro, 2007
Quênia

The World Social Forum in Nairobi in January 2007 was a timely New Year rallying event for Kenyans to revisit the fundamental principles for building a democratic and sustainable society as we prepare for December 2007 elections.The current organizing principles of the institutions that govern us in Kenya are narrow and serve the few at the expense of the many millions of Kenyans that live in abject poverty. Yet, from all corners of the country it is acknowledged that it is within our collective ability to create a healthy and sustainable society that serves and work for all

THE LAND SECTOR NON-STATE ACTORS (LSNSA)

Journal Articles & Books
Setembro, 2011
Quênia

kenya land alliance download :Memorandum On Continued Engagement With The Ministry Of Lands On Land Reforms Presented To: The Ministry Of Lands. The approval by the public of the Constitution at the referendum on August 4, 2010 and its promulgation on August 27, 2010 heralded a new dawn of governance in Kenya. Through its broad provisions, it is expected that it will spur social and economic development and secure the land rights of all Kenyans, by among others guaranteeing them ownership, control and access to natural resources.

Land Mali Umma

Journal Articles & Books
Setembro, 2001
Quênia

For a long time the issue of land and related problems has been debated mostly by academicians, politicians and professionals. Although the problem has remained more or less one of the most talked of in Kenya, the public has very often been left out of the debate. Again mostly the debate has been dominated more by complaining about either the lack of policy or the bad land policies and laws and the failure by successive governments to correct those problems.

Linking climate change strategies and land conflicts in Cambodia: Evidence from the Greater Aural region

Journal Articles & Books
Dezembro, 2018
Cambodja

This paper investigates how climate change strategies and resource conflicts are shaping each other in the Greater Aural region of western Cambodia. Agro-industrial projects linked to climate change goals are reshaping both social and ecological dynamics, by altering patterns of access to land and water resources as well as the nature of the resources themselves. Using a landscape perspective, we investigate these social and ecological changes occurring across space and time.

“Nothing for Our Land”: Impact of Land Confiscation on Farmers in Myanmar

Reports & Research
Dezembro, 2018
Myanmar

ABSTRACTED FROM SUMMARY: Disputes over land remain one of the central challenges in Myanmar’s evolving reform process. Land confiscations and forced evictions were a major feature of decades of military rule and internal armed conflict. Small farmers bore the brunt as government officials, military commanders, and their cronies seized land for personal and institutional enrichment; authorities promoted development plans without regard for those affected; and the military and ethnic armed groups took advantage of fighting and displacement to grab vast swathes of territory.

From boomerangs to minefields and catapults: dynamics of trans-local resistance to land-grabs

Journal Articles & Books
Dezembro, 2019
Global

This paper explores the political processes that activists engaged in contesting land grabbing have triggered to connect claims across borders and to international institutions, regimes and processes. Through a review of cases of land-grab resistance that have led to project cancelation or suspension, I argue that contextual elements of the land grab and shifting geopolitics highlight the need for adaptation and refinement of models of transnational advocacy, historically structured in North–South patterns.