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Issuescommon propertyLandLibrary Resource
There are 441 content items of different types and languages related to common property on the Land Portal.
Displaying 1 - 12 of 369

Global Gathering of Women Pastoralists: Summary Report and Action Plan

Reports & Research
January, 2011
Global

The Global Gathering of Women Pastoralists, held from 21-26 November 2010 in Mera (Gujarat), India, brought together over 100 women from herding communities scattered across 32 different countries to discuss the myriad problems faced by nomadic and semi-nomadic women pastoralists worldwide, and how, united, they can strive to solve them.

Focus on Africa: Uganda Lesson Brief, The Compulsory Acquisition of Privately-Held Land by Government

Policy Papers & Briefs
January, 2011
Africa

This lesson brief focuses on four issues - compulsory acquisition uses; procedures for exercising this authority; compensation; and redress - which are central to balancing private land rights and compulsory land acquisition for public purposes.It is part of the Uganda module on the 

Book 'Gender and Agrarian Reforms' highlights the gendered impacts of global agrarian reform

Journal Articles & Books
January, 2009
Asia

Through case studies from Asia, Africa, eastern Europe and Latin America, this book by Manchester Metropolitan University’s Susie Jacobs presents an overview of global gender and agrarian reform experiences.  Recognising the widespread marginalisation of gender issues from policy and theoretical discussions of agrarian reform,  Jacobs attempts to highlight the profound implications that redistribution of land has for women and for gender relations.  The book compares land and agrarian reforms in which land has been redistributed collectively and to individual households.

Africa's Land Reform Policies Can Boost Agricultural Productivity, Create Food Security and Eradicate Poverty

Reports & Research
January, 2013
Africa

WASHINGTON, July 22, 2013—Africa is home to nearly half of the world’s usable uncultivated land, some 202 million hectares that can be brought under the plow. Yet it has the highest poverty rate in the world. The continent’s poor development record suggests it has not leveraged its abundant agricultural land and natural resources to generate shared and sustained growth.

Scaling-Up Progress

Presenting the book: “China’s disappearing countryside: Towards Sustainable Land Governance for the Poor”

Journal Articles & Books
December, 2012
Asia

China’s land policy has been in the news frequently over the last few weeks, since the Chinese government announced it will reform its land policy in the wake of the Third Plenum last November.


For those who do not know the Chinese land system follows a brief introduction: