textabstractOver the last two decades, an estimated 4 million people in Vietnam have been affected or had their lives disrupted by the loss of or the forced eviction from their land or though land conversion where the state decided that it was to be used for other purposes. Most of them are farming households, many of whom suffered negative consequences in terms of lower incomes, unemployment and a lower social status. Some may have managed to enhance their welfare, but on the whole there is little systematic evidence on the overall impacts they had to deal with.
Résultats de la recherche
Showing items 1 through 9 of 8.-
Library ResourceDocuments de politique et mémoiresdécembre, 2013Viet Nam
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Library ResourceDocuments de politique et mémoiresjuin, 2013Viet Nam
textabstractAfter the Doi Moi (‘renovation’) reforms in Vietnam from 1986, land ownership rules were adjusted, effectively terminating former land collectivisation efforts. While land ownership remained fully under the control of the state, a 1993 land law conferred 20-year leaseholds to most farmers. They could now utilize farm land individually, and sell, swap and mortgage the land in a situation similar to private ownership. These leaseholds are now expiring and a new 2013 land law is in the making.
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Library ResourceDocuments de politique et mémoiresjuin, 1972Indonésie
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Library ResourceDocuments de politique et mémoiresfévrier, 2012Philippines
textabstractMainstream adherence to land titling as a strategy to address rural poverty has gained even more sway against the backdrop of the contemporary phenomenon of large-scale farmland acquisitions, known to some as “global land grabbing”. The orthodox narrative, embraced in toto by organisations such as the World Bank, is that formal property rights mitigate the risks of these land acquisitions and allow the poor to access the benefits of these acquisitions.
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Library ResourceDocuments de politique et mémoiresnovembre, 2001Viet Nam
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Library ResourceDocuments de politique et mémoiresmars, 1998Philippines
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Library ResourceDocuments de politique et mémoiresnovembre, 2007Indonésie
textabstractThere is a well-known debate about the respective roles of geography versus institutions in explaining the long-term development of countries. These debates have usually been based on cross-country regressions where questions about parameter heterogeneity, unobserved heterogeneity, and endogeneity cannot easily be controlled for. The innovation of Acemoglu, Johnson and Robinson (2001) was to address this last point by using settler mortality as an instrument for endogenous institutions and found that this supported their line of reasoning.
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Library ResourceDocuments de politique et mémoiresjanvier, 1991Indonésie
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