Skip to main content

page search

Issuesland rightsLandLibrary Resource
Displaying 1465 - 1476 of 3137

A Summary of Land Policy Principles drawn from the Commission of Inquiry into the Land Law System of Kenya (‘Njonjo Commission’), The Constitution of Kenya Review Commission (CKRC), Proceedings of the National Civil Society Conference on Land Reform an...

Reports & Research
April, 2004
Kenya
Africa

Contains introduction; the goals and objectives of land policy; land sovereignty; land tenure classification; incidents of tenure; historical claims; tenure of land-based resources; productive and sustainable land use; the management and development of land; land rights delivery; demarcation and cadastral survey; land market regulation; land dispute resolution; appendix on national civil society land policy principles.

Women Gaining Ground: Securing Land Rights as a Critical Pillar of Climate Change Strategy

Reports & Research
December, 2015
Africa

A call to action including: securing women’s rights to land and natural resources, including within communities; ensuring women’s meaningful participation in decision-making and dispute resolution related to access, use, control, and management of land and natural resources; identifying and supporting research and sex-disaggregated data collection related to climate change and women’s land rights.

Final Report of the Workshop for launching of LandNet West Africa

Reports & Research
February, 2001
Africa

Report of a workshop in Ouagadougou to launch LandNet West Africa. Contains context and objectives of the workshop; stakes of land policies and legislation in West Africa (including decentralisation and transboundary issues); success and sustainability of the activities of a network; role of international and sub-regional organisations; major conclusions; structure of the network; funding; list and contact addresses of participants.

Land Security and the Poor in Ghana: Is there a Way Forward? A Land Sector Scoping Study

Reports & Research
October, 2001
Ghana
Africa

A summary of a larger study commissioned by DFID Ghana. Covers findings of the study and suggestions for moving forward. The conclusions include that tenure insecurity is more widespread than generally recognised, its sources are complex, current strategies are inadequate, promising conditions exist, reform rather than improvement is needed, a community based approach is the way forward. The National Land Policy is not pro-poor, nor are classic titling approaches serving the poor.

Law in the natural resource squeeze: ‘land grabbing’, investment treaties and human rights

Reports & Research
October, 2016
Africa

Discusses highlights from a recent academic article exploring whether 3,000 bilateral and regional investment treaties protect ‘land grab’ deals and how these impact the land rights of rural people. Argues that, if not properly thought through, international treaties to protect foreign investment could compound shortcomings of local and national governance, undermining the rights of people impacted by the investments.

Whose Land is it? The status of customary land tenure in Cameroon

Reports & Research
February, 2011
Cameroon
Africa

Includes what is the problem and what can be done?; the law and customary land rights; how does Forest Law treat customary land rights?; lessons from other African states; the way forward. Argues that the current de jure reality is that most rural Cameroonians are little more than squatters on their own land with regard to forests and other land assets.

Land rights and investment treaties: Exploring the interface

Reports & Research
June, 2015
Africa

The spread and deepening of economic globalisation has highlighted the ever closer connections between the international legal arrangements for the governance of the global economy on the one hand, and claims to land and natural resources on the other. In a globalised world, land governance is shaped by international as well as national regulation. As pressures on valuable lands intensify and land relations become more trans-national, increasing recourse to international investment treaties is redesigning spaces for land claims at local and national levels.