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Showing items 1 through 9 of 10.
  1. Library Resource
    Reports & Research
    April, 2004
    South Africa

    A common misconception in relation to common property situations is that the choice of the legal form will determine whether communal property institutions function well or not. The reality is that whether good, fair management and land administration takes place or not is often largely determined by issues like the following, which can undermine effective governance and land administration irrespective of which legal entity is used:

    • Do the majority of residents understand and agree with how land administration processes work?

  2. Library Resource

    An analysis of some of the consequences of state devolution in land and resource tenure

    Conference Papers & Reports
    October, 2001
    South Africa

    This paper argues that the focus in the community based natural resource management (CBNRM) literature on the devolution and decentralisation of state authority and responsibility over natural resources to communities does not pay sufficient attention to the role of the state in creating and maintaining a coherent institutional environment.

  3. Library Resource
    Reports & Research
    December, 2004
    South Africa

    This paper is concerned primarily with the functions of land administration. Its
    purpose is to describe the current land administration practices as understood by
    traditional structures with a view to unpacking some of the components of the existing
    African tenure arrangements in KwaZulu-Natal. This, it is hoped, will help to create a
    base to understand how communal land systems operate, regardless of which structure
    governs them, in order to support practices that secure tenure effectively.

  4. Library Resource

    Lessons from the case studies on what might work on the ground

    Conference Papers & Reports
    November, 2001
    South Africa

    The paper asserts that in order to be effective it is important to work with and from existing tenure systems and to build upon them, rather than expect that they can be “demolished and replaced by efficient new systems”.  Experience both here and elsewhere in Africa also tells us that attempts to change tenure tend to result in a “defaulting” back to what is known, often with increased confusion and conflict over procedures and adjudication authorities.

  5. Library Resource

    Report on LEAP symposium 2007

    Conference Papers & Reports
    December, 2007
    South Africa

    A report with annexures reviewing lessons emerging Leap projects and partnerships, focusing on tenure in relation to a set of issues affecting poor people’s livelihoods and local economic development

  6. Library Resource
    Reports & Research
    December, 2005
    South Africa

    Approaches to securing tenure have been dominated by debates about whether titling advances secure land tenure and development in developing countries or whether it is either ineffectual or detrimental to socially more relevant systems. While the policies of many developing countries, including South Africa, continue to support titling approaches to securing tenure, there is widespread confirmation in the literature that title can be problematic for poor people living in both urban and rural areas.

  7. Library Resource

    Improving the nature, style and content of the founding documents of legal entities established to take transfer of land.

    Manuals & Guidelines
    December, 2002
    South Africa

    Simplification is a process in which all the essential provisions of an existing Legalese constitution are captured in plain language. Simplifying a constitution is more complex than simplifying the language within it. It involves digging out and putting in order the meaning of a document, as well as writing it in plain language.

  8. Library Resource
    Reports & Research
    October, 2002
    South Africa

    This report was prepared for the Department of Land Affairs (DLA) in South Africa. In 2001 DLA set up the Communal Property Institutions (CPI) Task Team to review land reform legal entities. The purpose of the review and this report is to improve the situation and functioning of CPIs in order to move towards, rather than away from, achieving the objectives of land reform. To do this, the report covers:

    • Methods of assessing and analysing cpi performance

    • CPI assessment and analysis

    • Offering explanations for causes of CPI problems

  9. Library Resource
    Reports & Research
    October, 2002
    South Africa

    This report was prepared for the Department of Land Affairs (DLA) in South Africa. In 2001 DLA set up the Communal Property Institutions (CPI) Task Team to review land reform legal entities. The purpose of the review and this report is to improve the situation and functioning of CPIs in order to move towards, rather than away from, achieving the objectives of land reform. To do this, the report covers:

    • Methods of assessing and analysing cpi performance

    • CPI assessment and analysis

    • Offering explanations for causes of CPI problems

  10. Library Resource

    Bridging the gap between paper and real practice in setting up common property institutions in land reform in South Africa

    Reports & Research
    May, 2000
    South Africa

    This archival paper takes a hard look at the claim that Communal Property Institutions established as part of South Africa's land reform programme are failing. It argues that there are no meaningful indicators against which assessments of success or failure can be made. It asserts that the tenure security of the group and its members should be the primary purpose of land reform CPIs because secure tenure is the primary mechanism for reducing risk for vulnerable people and is the universal need of the group.


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