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IssueslandLandLibrary Resource
There are 6, 202 content items of different types and languages related to land on the Land Portal.
Displaying 1717 - 1728 of 6006

Land Tenancy in Asia, Africa and Latin America: A Look to the Past and a View to the Future

December, 1998
Sub-Saharan Africa
Latin America and the Caribbean

Literature review, focusing on recent and contemporary tenancy structures in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Tenancy for purposes of this review is broadly defined to include different leasing arrangements such sharecropping, labor tenancy, fixed cash rentals, and reverse leasing. Authors have limited our discussion to private leasing of agricultural land, thereby ignoring issues pertaining to leasing of public, forest, and other noncrop lands.

Land lease markets and agricultural efficiency: theory and evidence from Ethiopia

December, 1999
Ethiopia
Sub-Saharan Africa

This paper develops a theoretical model of land leasing that includes transaction costs, risk pooling motives and non-tradable productive inputs. It investigates the empirical implications of land contracts using data collected from four villages in Ethiopia.The paper shows that sharecropping is the dominant contract if transaction costs are negligible, but that a rental contract may arise if transaction costs decrease with increasing the tenant’s share of output.

Civil society and the land question in Tanzania

December, 1999
Tanzania
Sub-Saharan Africa

The Land Policy in Tanzania is an example of citizens engaging in a protracted struggle for effective participation in the policy process, despite the long exclusion they have experienced in policy making. This paper looks at the evolution of the policy, and the interactions between civil society and the state in its development.The paper concludes that this was the first serious and systematic civic organizations' challenge to the state command model of policy process.

The Reform of Rural Land Markets in Latin America and the Caribbean: Research, Theory, and Policy Implications

December, 1990
Ecuador
Costa Rica
Honduras
Dominican Republic
El Salvador
Saint Lucia
Guatemala
Latin America and the Caribbean

Summarizes recent research (to 1991) on rural land markets in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region and on the relationship between this research and broader land tenure issues. The purpose of the project that prompted this paper was to carry out cross-country and longitudinal research on land tenure issues in the LAC region so as to provide an instructive and informative analysis of how tenure patterns affect economic, rural development, and environmental issues.

Wildlife management and land reform in Southeastern Zimbabwe: a compatible pairing or a contradiction in terms?

December, 2002
Zimbabwe
Sub-Saharan Africa

Is land reform compatible with wildlife management? Zimbabwe is seeking to combine the redistribution of large, 'under-utilised' landholdings to smallholders, with wildlife management, which needs extensive land holdings to be viable. Whilst one stresses direct redistribution, equity and land for crops, the other emphasises maximising foreign exchange earnings, encouraging public-private partnerships and relies on trickle down.

Managing common land: the Sahel experience

December, 2001
Burkina Faso
Senegal
Sudan
Niger
Ethiopia
Sub-Saharan Africa

As decentralisation and tenure reform sweeps through the Sahel, doubts remain whether communities can look after commonly owned land. Is privatisation or state control the best means of preventing the degradation of resources? Can local communities forge institutional mechanisms to regulate competing claims on common resources?

Land registration in Amhara Region, Ethiopia

December, 2004
Ethiopia
Sub-Saharan Africa

Assesses the process to establish a system of land registration and improve land tenure security, and its outcomes for poor and marginalised groups in Amhara, Ethiopia .The registration process is found to be generating conflict at the local level, due to illegal land grabbing, encroachments into common lands and land sales.

A land title is not enough: ensuring sustainable land restitution in Colombia

December, 2013
Colombia

The violent struggle to control territory for economic, military and political reasons, coupled with high levels of rural poverty and the high concentration of land ownership among relatively few owners, has been one of the root causes of Colombia’s 50-year-old internal armed conflict. There has been an insatiable appetite amongst numerous actors in Colombia to gain and maintain control over land deemed critical to their varying interests.