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Securing Land Rights for All through Fit-for-Purpose Land Administration Approach: The Case of Nepal

LandLibrary Resource
Peer-reviewed publication
December, 2020
Nepal

After the political change in Nepal of 1951, leapfrog land policy improvements have been recorded, however, the land reform initiatives have been short of full success. Despite a land administration system based on cadaster and land registries in place, 25% of the arable land with an estimated 10 million spatial units on the ground are informally occupied and are off-register.

Maintaining the Many Societal Benefits of Rangelands: The Case of Hawaiʻi

LandLibrary Resource
Peer-reviewed publication
December, 2020
Global

Well-managed rangelands provide important economic, environmental, and cultural benefits. Yet, many rangelands worldwide are experiencing pressures of land-use change, overgrazing, fire, and drought, causing rapid degradation. These pressures are especially acute in the Hawaiian Islands, which we explore as a microcosm with some broadly relevant lessons.

De-/Fencing Grasslands: Ongoing Boundary Making and Unmaking in Postcolonial Kenya

LandLibrary Resource
Peer-reviewed publication
December, 2020
Kenya

Across contemporary East Africa, fencing is spreading with incredible speed over hundreds of thousands of hectares of rangelands, fundamentally reconfiguring land tenure dynamics. But why is this happening now, what are the precursors, and what will happen in the years to come?

Developing a Metropolitan-Wide Urban Forest Strategy for a Large, Expanding and Densifying Capital City: Lessons from Melbourne, Australia

LandLibrary Resource
Peer-reviewed publication
December, 2020
Australia

Urban forests provide many ecosystem services, such as reducing heat, improving air quality, treatment of stormwater, carbon sequestration, as well as biodiversity benefits. These benefits have resulted in increasing demand for urban forests and strategies to maintain and enhance this natural infrastructure.

The Fit for Purpose Land Administration Approach-Connecting People, Processes and Technology in Mozambique

LandLibrary Resource
Peer-reviewed publication
December, 2020
Mozambique

Mozambique started a massive land registration program to register five million parcels and delimitate four thousand communities. The results of the first two years of this program illustrated that the conventional methods utilized for the land tenure registration were too expensive and time-consuming and faced several data quality problems.

Analyzing the Changes of the Meaning of Customary Land in the Context of Land Grabbing in Malawi

LandLibrary Resource
Peer-reviewed publication
December, 2020
Malawi

Ordinary Malawians who live in customary land have been suffering from land grabbing due to their weak and ill-defined land rights. Although Malawi has experienced a number of land reforms that should have contributed to strengthening customary land rights, many people in customary land still suffer from land grabbing.

Assessment of Land Administration in Ecuador Based on the Fit-for-Purpose Approach

LandLibrary Resource
Peer-reviewed publication
December, 2020
Ecuador

Land administration is established to manage the people-to-land relationship. However, it is believed that 70% of the land in developing countries is unregistered. In the case of Ecuador, the government has an ambitious strategy to implement a national cadaster on the full territory in a short time period.

Land Concentration and Land Grabbing Processes—Evidence from Slovakia

LandLibrary Resource
Peer-reviewed publication
December, 2020
Slovakia

In Slovakia, the large-scale acquisition of agricultural land in combination with land concentration represents a legitimate threat that can lead to land grabbing. Based on the research, two interrelated areas of protection need to be effectively regulated to limit land grabbing: the protection of access to land and the protection of agricultural land.

Exploring PPPs in Support of Fit-for-Purpose Land Administration: A Case Study from Côte d’Ivoire

LandLibrary Resource
Peer-reviewed publication
December, 2020
Global

Public-private partnerships (PPPs) may facilitate the implementation of fit-for-purpose land administration (FFPLA); however, the approach can be compromised when funding for land registration is insufficient or donor projects end. This paper aims to introduce a new form of PPP to the literature on FFPLA, further extending the discourse and options available on PPPs for FFPLA.