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News on Land

Get the latest news on land and property rights, brought to you by trusted sources from across the globe.

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Kenyan slum activists build climate change resilience from the bottom up

By: Lou del Bello


Date: 12 January 2017


Source: IRIN


Living in the Kenyan slum of Mukuru is hard enough, but when it rains it’s downright miserable. Streets flood, sewage overflows, homes are inundated. 


After each bout of torrential rain, Nairobi’s largest informal settlement is left a little shabbier, a little poorer, the community more insecure.


Thinking about scale in land information systems

By: Devex Editor

Date: March 15th 2016

Source: Devex.com


This week in Washington, D.C., the World Bank is hosting its Annual Conference on Land and  Poverty, a professional meeting that has swelled considerably in the past five years. Attendee numbers have expanded to a downright packed 1,200 people from governments, development agencies, academia, nongovernmental organizations and technology firms.

Australia: Backlog of Aboriginal land claims will take 90 years to clear

By: Michelle Brown
Date: April 3rd 2016
Source: ABC News Australia

Judging by the number of claims that have been made, the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Rights Act is a victim of its own success.

In the past year the number of undetermined land claims has increased to over 29,000. It has been calculated this "land bank" will take 90 years or more to determine.

Brazilian photographer fights to protect remote tribe's rights

By Sophie Davies

Source: Thomson Reuters Foundation


RIO DE JANEIRO, April 5 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - When Brazilian photographer Claudia Andujar started working with Yanomami people in the Amazon rainforest in the 1970s, most of them did not know what a camera was.


Andujar spent most of that decade and more in northern Brazil photographing the Yanomami, one of Latin America's most remote indigenous tribes.