THE LAND REGULATIONS, 2004 Form 37
THE LAND ACT, CAP 227 THE LAND REGULATIONS, 2004 Form 37 CAVEAT FORBIDDING ANY DEALING IN LAND
THE LAND ACT, CAP 227 THE LAND REGULATIONS, 2004 Form 37 CAVEAT FORBIDDING ANY DEALING IN LAND
THE LAND ACT, CAP 227 THE LAND REGULATIONS 2004 Form 35 MORTGAGE/PLEDGE* OF CUSTOMARY OWNERSHIP
THE LAND ACT, CAP 227 THE LAND REGULATIONS, 2004 Form 38 REMOVAL OF A CAVEAT
THE LAND ACT CAP 227 THE LAND REGULATIONS, 2004 Form 41 CONSENT BY SPOUSE(S) TO TRANSACTION IN LAND
THE LAND ACT, CAP 227 THE LAND REGULATIONS, 2004 Form 53 APPLICATION FOR APPROVAL TO DEAL IN LAND PART ONE: PARTICULARS OF LAND DEALING
The current land administration system in Pakistan aims at land revenue assessment and tax collection for the fiscal purposes. This system is organised or structured on the traditional land registers and cadastral maps in paper formats, and their maintenance is mainly dependent on the hard works of the local land administrator so called “Patwari” at the grass-root level within his jurisdiction.
Existing studies on blockchain within land administration have focused mainly on replacing or complementing the technology for land registration and titling. This study explores the potential of using blockchain technology to enhance the transparency of all land administration processes using an integrative review methodology coupled with a framework analysis. This study draws on the Ghanaian land administration perspective to make this insightful. It appears possible to apply a permissionless public blockchain across all land administration processes.
Transforming a pluralistic tenure system into unified statutory rights has been a major objective of the development of property law in many developing countries. Many law and development scholars have assumed that unified land rights are a pre-condition to development and that a pluralistic tenure land system is a major source of uncertainty and insecurity. This article challenges this commonly held assumption by way of a case study of Indonesia's effort to unify the laws governing land.
Open Data is data that can be freely used, shared and built-on by anyone, anywhere, for any purpose. Open Data is widely considered to be an effective response to land corruption by increasing transparency, supporting innovation and increasing civic engagement. Advocates of open data believe in its potential for empowering citizens to gain more insight on government spendings and land-related decisions; giving civil society greater power to hold governments accountable for their actions.
A vast array of trends and innovations, such as drones and person-to-person trust solutions, have been proposed to revolutionize the task of recording land and property rights. There is, however, a gap in current research regarding how to approach systematically the future(s) of cadastral systems. This paper introduces socio-technical transitions theory and multi-level perspective (MLP) framework in particular as a way to structure potential pathways for cadastral systems.