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Leaving two thirds out of development: Female headed households and common property resources in the highlands of Tigray, Ethiopia

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
November, 2006
Nepal
Zambia
Afghanistan
Guatemala
Indonesia
Canada
Ethiopia
New Zealand
Mozambique
Laos
Uganda
Kyrgyzstan
Netherlands
India
Mongolia
Mexico
Cambodia
Africa

This report contains the results of a study of gender and access to forest and tree resources, women and men’s use of common lands and botanical resources, and the importance of these resources for the livelihoods of people in highland Ethiopia.

Improving tenure security for the poor in Africa: Namibia Country Case Study.

LandLibrary Resource
Reports & Research
November, 2006
Angola
Kenya
South Africa
Germany
Zimbabwe
Botswana
Namibia
Norway
Africa

This case study looks at the land tenure in Namibia, where for a century of colonial rule indigenous Namibians were dispossessed from rights to both land and resources – by German and then white South African settlers establishing commercial farms and related businesses. Access to freehold tenure was reserved for white settlers and tenure security for indigenous Namibians largely disappeared.

European Union accession and land tenure data in Central and Eastern Europe

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
November, 2006
Serbia
Slovenia
North Macedonia
Slovakia
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Croatia
Turkey
Bulgaria
Estonia
Ireland
Malta
Italy
Cyprus
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Hungary
Albania
Montenegro
Poland
Latvia
Romania
Czech Republic
Europe

EU membership has profound implications for all parts of a country’s economy, as well as for its relationships with the other countries in Europe and its internal political structures. Members of the EU must be democracies governed by the rule of law and which guarantee human rights.

Improving tenure security for the poor in Africa: Mali - Country Case Study

LandLibrary Resource
Reports & Research
November, 2006
Mozambique
Burkina Faso
Kenya
Mali
Germany
Ghana
Ethiopia
Niger
Norway
Africa

The study aims to clarify the various issues regarding land security of poor and other marginalized groups in Malian rural areas. It looks into questions relating to how poor and vulnerable groups obtain access to land and natural resources, and what factors cause their exclusion. It analyzes existing methods for formalizing land rights and land transactions and their impacts on the poor.

Implementing homestead plot programmes

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
November, 2006
Bangladesh
Nigeria
Guatemala
Indonesia
Brazil
Guinea
Thailand
Nepal
Philippines
Nicaragua
Uganda
Japan
Netherlands
India
Papua New Guinea
Cambodia
Asia

The Livelihood Support Programme (LSP) evolved from the belief that FAO could have a greater impact on reducing poverty and food insecurity, if its wealth of talent and experience were integrated into a more flexible and demand-responsive team approach.

Good Governance in Land Administration

LandLibrary Resource
Reports & Research
November, 2006

This joint FAO-World Bank publication aims to draw attention to the negative impacts of weak governance in land administration and to point out the manifold benefits of good governance in the protection of property rights and the development of efficient land and property markets.

Making rights a reality

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
November, 2006
Nepal
Laos
Mozambique
Zambia
Kyrgyzstan
Guatemala
Netherlands
India
Ethiopia
New Zealand
Mongolia
Brazil
Cambodia
Africa

This paper represents part of an area of work which analyses access to natural resources in Mozambique. An initial paper examined the extent to which Mozambique’s recent regulatory changes to natural resource access and management have had their intended effects (LSP Working Paper 17: Norfolk, S. (2004).

Access to water, pastoral resource management and pastoralists’ livelihoods

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
November, 2006
United States of America
Nepal
Zambia
Mozambique
Guatemala
Guinea
Ethiopia
Kenya
Laos
Kyrgyzstan
Somalia
Italy
Botswana
Cambodia
India
Sudan
Mongolia
Africa

This paper represents part of an area of work which analyses the linkages between rights to land and water. An initial scoping paper explored the interface between land and water rights (LSP Working Paper 10: Hodgson, S. (2004). “Land and water – the rights interface”). It is complemented by two regional analyses: this Working Paper and LSP Working Paper 25: IIED. (2006).

Participatory Livelihoods Monitoring

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
November, 2006
Nepal
Laos
Mozambique
Zambia
Kyrgyzstan
Guatemala
Germany
United Kingdom
Cambodia
Asia

This Livelihood Support Programme (LSP) Working Paper is the result of a follow-up on an extensive research study undertaken in Cambodia. Results of the study were the development of a participatory and results-oriented monitoring methodology and suggestions to overcome basic communication gaps between the rural population and decision makers on different administrative levels.

Children’s property and inheritance rights and their livelihoods: The context of HIV and AIDS in Southern and East Africa

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
November, 2006
Mozambique
Zambia
Sweden
Zimbabwe
Namibia
Eswatini
Congo
Malawi
Rwanda
Jordan
Laos
South Africa
Lesotho
Uganda
Kyrgyzstan
Tanzania
Botswana
Kenya
Africa
Eastern Africa
Southern Africa

This paper focuses on legal and institutional aspects of children’s property and inheritance rights in Southern and East Africa. Chapter 2 discusses violations of children’s property and inheritance rights and discusses how the spread of HIV/AIDS has contributed to the violations.

Linking livelihoods and gender analysis for achieving gender transformative change

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
November, 2006
Burkina Faso
Bangladesh
Nigeria
Nepal
Gambia
Mali
Zimbabwe
China
Congo
Ethiopia
Colombia
Mozambique
South Africa
Nicaragua
Uganda
Cameroon
Tanzania
Netherlands
India
Sudan
Gabon
Kenya

Issues of transformative change in gender relations have been on the development agenda for four decades and no-one could say that there have not been significant policy initiatives taken to achieve this objective. The enthusiasm generated during the 1975 International Year for Women and throughout the UN international Women’s Decade from 1976-1985 is undeniable and the achievements are clear.