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Issuestenure foncièreLandLibrary Resource
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What Role for Tropical Forests in Climate Change Mitigation? The Case of Costa Rica

Décembre, 1998
Amérique latine et Caraïbes

Land and forestry-based activities could in principle play important roles as climate change mitigation strategies. In practice, however, several questions have been raised about their feasibility. Therefore, understanding the processes and determinants of land use changes is critical. This paper aims to contribute to such understanding in the larger part of a larger project on sustainable development and economic growth. It begins with a dynamic model of land use.

A conceptual analysis of the problems associated with real property development in sub-Saharan Africa

Décembre, 2000
Afrique sub-saharienne

Forty per cent of sub-Saharan Africa's population live on less than a dollar a day and more than seventy per cent are currently without adequate shelter, so what has property got to do with it? This paper attempts to highlight the need for Africa to develop the necessary institutions to support the property and construction sectors, to facilitate infrastructure delivery and promote sustainable growth and development.The authors highlight the fact that Africa, whilst being well endowed with natural resources their capital markets remain underdeveloped.

Deforestation and Land Use on the Evolving Frontier: An Empirical Assessment [in Nicaragua]

Décembre, 1998
Nicaragua
Amérique latine et Caraïbes

The advance of the agricultural frontier constitutes the biggest source of deforestation in Central America today. This conversion of tropical forests into agricultural land and pasture is the direct result of individual land use decisions. This paper presents a simple analytical model of household land use, followed by an econometric analysis of household survey data from the Río San Juan region of Nicaragua in order to test for consistency with the model.

Links between tenure security and food security in poor agrarian economies: causal linkages and policy implications

Décembre, 2015
Algérie
Éthiopie

Population growth leads to growing land scarcity and landlessness in poor agrarian economies. Many of these also face severe climate risks that may increase in the future. Tenure security is important for food security in such countries and at the same time threatened by social instability that further accelerate rural-urban and international migration. Provision of secure property rights with low-cost methods that create investment incentives can lead to land use intensification and improved food security.

Malawi: Services and policies needed to support sustainable smallholder agriculture

Décembre, 1996
Malawi
Europe
Afrique sub-saharienne

Malawi’ s smallholder agriculture is facing a crisis, particularly in the more populated south. There is an insidious combination of land shortage, continuous cultivation of maize, declining soil fertility, low yields, deforestation, poverty and high population growth rate. Smallholder farmers are doing what they can to maintain household livelihoods under these difficult circumstances, however many of their actions, which are necessary for short term survival, such as the cultivation of hillsides, are not sustainable in the long term.

Debating shifting cultivation in the Eastern Himalayas: farmers’ innovations as lessons for policy

Décembre, 2005
Népal
Bangladesh
Inde
Bhoutan
Chine
Myanmar
Asie méridionale
Asie orientale
Océanie

Hundreds of millions of people in Asia are dependent on shifting cultivation, yet the practice has tended to be seen in a negative light and discouraged by policy makers. This document challenges prevailing assumptions, arguing that shifting cultivation – if properly practised – is actually a ‘good practice’ system for productively using hill and mountain land, while ensuring conservation of forest, soil, and water resources. Focusing on Eastern Himalayan farmers, it looks at whether there is a need for new, more effective and more socially acceptable policy options that help to improve shi

Economic Instruments for Water Pollution

Décembre, 1996
Europe

The issues associated with economic instruments are complex and the main paper contains a detailed, technical discussion. This summary highlights some of the main points from that discussion. It is structured around the following issues:the water pollution problem the advantages of economic instruments pollution from industrial plants and sewage treatment works pollution from agricultural and other land practical considerationsconclusion and questions for consideration.

The ‘new’ communities: land tenure reform and the advent of new institutions in Zambézia Province, Mozambique

Décembre, 2002
Mozambique
Afrique sub-saharienne

Recently, new community-level institutions have emerged in Zambézia province, Mozambique, through land rights registration. Numerous rural groups have delimited their acquired land rights and established community-level management systems. This paper assesses the rise of these ‘new’ institutions and whether they have replicated, replaced, or been added on to the existing pattern of state and nonstate institutions and processes.The new communities have registered large swathes of land, but have had had a limited impact on development processes.

Drivers of agricultural diversification in India, Haryana and the Greenbelt farms of India

Décembre, 2008
Inde
Asie méridionale

Traditionally, agricultural diversification is referred to a subsistence kind of farming wherein farmers were cultivating varieties of crops on a piece of land and undertaking several enterprises on their farm portfolio. Household food and income security were the basic objectives of agricultural diversification. In recent decades, agricultural diversification is increasingly being considered as a panacea for many ills in the agricultural development of the India.

Land tenure reform and the balance of power in eastern and southern Africa

Décembre, 1999
Afrique du Sud
Lesotho
Ouganda
Zimbabwe
Namibie
Tanzania
Malawi
Éthiopie
Afrique sub-saharienne

This paper examines the current wave of land tenure reform in eastern and southern Africa. It discusses how far tenure reform reflects a shift in powers over property from centre to periphery. A central question is whether tenure reform is designed to deliver to rural smallholders greater security of tenure and greater control over the regulation and transfer of these rights.Policy conclusions include: