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Resultados de la búsqueda

Mostrando ítems 1 a 9 de 8.
  1. Library Resource
    Manual y guías
    Octubre, 2021
    Global

    The Open Up Guide on Land Governance is a resource  aimed to be used by governments from developing countries to collect and release land-related data to improve data quality, availability, accessibility and use for improved citizen engagement, decision making and innovation. It sets out:

    1. Key datasets for land management accountability, and how they should be collected, stored, shared and published for improving land governance and transparency;

  2. Library Resource
    Guide pour l’ouverture des donn es ouvertes
    Manual y guías
    Octubre, 2021
    Global

    Les Open Up Guides sont des outils pratiques développés par l’ODC et ses partenaires thématiques pour aider les gouvernements et d’autres acteurs à utiliser la publication d’ensembles de données stratégiques pour relever les principaux défis politiques. Ils s’appuient sur des preuves pratiques tout en recueillant des enseignements pour s’assurer que les normes mondiales sont applicables localement.

  3. Library Resource

    Land Use Policy Volume 57

    Publicación revisada por pares
    Noviembre, 2016
    Estados Unidos de América

    Farmland ownership fragmentation is one of the important drivers of land-use changes. It is a process that in its extreme form can essentially limit land management sustainability. Based on a typology of land degradation and its causes, this process is here classified for the first time as an underlying cause which through tenure insecurity causes land degradation in five types (water erosion, wind erosion, soil compaction, reduction of organic matter, and nutrient depletion).

  4. Library Resource

    Land Use Policy Volume 61

    Publicación revisada por pares
    Febrero, 2017
    África

    Land tenure remains one of the most critical factors determining equity under REDD+, as we demonstrated through our previous article, ‘Roots of inequity: how the implementation of REDD+ reinforces past injustices”. Githiru responded to this paper, with some apparent challenges to both the empirical basis and theoretical arguments, that we had put forward.

  5. Library Resource

    Land Use Policy Volume 81

    Publicación revisada por pares
    Febrero, 2019
    República Centroafricana

    Most of the land in sub-Saharan Africa is governed under various forms of customary tenure. Over the past three decades a quiet paradigm shift has been taking place transforming the way such landl is governed. Driven in part by adaptations to changing context but also accelerated by neo-liberal reforms, this shift has created a ‘new’ customary tenure in sub-Saharan Africa. This paper reviews some of the evidence and analyses the ways in which this neo-liberalisation of customary tenure has been transforming relations of production and how land is governed in sub-Saharan Africa.

  6. Library Resource

    Land Use Policy Volume 50

    Publicación revisada por pares
    Enero, 2016
    Kenya

    The extent to which REDD+ initiatives should be a mechanism to address poverty and provide other co-benefits apart from carbon storage, is hotly debated. Here, we examine the benefit distribution policy and practice of a prominent REDD+ project in Kenya with the aim of understanding the extent to which it addresses equity.

  7. Library Resource
    Land markets, Property rights, and Deforestation: Insights from Indonesia
    Publicación revisada por pares
    Noviembre, 2017
    Indonesia

    We examine the emergence of land markets and their effects on forest land appropriation by farm households in Jambi Province, Sumatra, using micro-level data covering land use and land transactions for a period of more than 20 years (1992–2015). Based on a theoretical model of land acquisition by a heterogeneous farming population, different hypotheses are developed and empirically tested. Farm households involved in forest land appropriation differ from those involved in land market purchases in terms of migration status and other socioeconomic characteristics.

  8. Library Resource
    Informes e investigaciones
    Febrero, 2017
    Perú

    Una de las principales demandas de los pueblos indígenas es el reconocimiento y seguridad jurídica de sus territorios. En Perú se realiza a través del otorgamiento de títulos a comunidades nativas, política que se viene dando desde la década de los setenta, pero que a la fecha no ha culminado, existiendo todavía una demanda considerable de comunidades nativas por titular.

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