Résultats de la recherche
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Library ResourcePublication évaluée par des pairsjuin, 2023Afrique, Afrique occidentale
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Library ResourceArticles et LivresPublication évaluée par des pairsoctobre, 2020Afrique, Amérique latine et Caraïbes, Asie
The dynamics of current global challenges—like food and nutrition security, environmental degradation, climate change, and emergencies—reduce the availability of and/or access to natural resources, and thereby underline the urgency of achieving transformational changes in the governance of tenure. This is increasingly required to bring the greatest good to the most people, in line with human rights.
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Library ResourcePublication évaluée par des pairsmars, 2021Sénégal
L’originalité de la structure urbaine de Touba réside tout d’abord sur sa gestion dirigée par le Khalif général et son statut particulier d’un titre foncier qui s’adosse sur une forte démographie incontrôlée conjuguée à un fort étalement mal maitrisé. La politique d'urbanisme de Touba semble se résumer à la création de parcelles d'habitation et au libre choix laissé au khalife pour les sites d'implantation d'équipements ou d'infrastructures, et la destination des réserves.
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Library Resource
Vol 3, No 1: March 2020, Special Issue 2 on Land Policy in Africa
Publication évaluée par des pairsmars, 2020ZambieIn Zambia, security of tenure for communities residing under customary land tenure settings has in recent years increasingly come under threat owing to the pressures of high rate of urbanization, speculation, subdivision and conversion to state land, which effectively excludes marginal populations from accessing resources for their land. While customary land is a major resource for most Zambians, the inadequacy or total lack of documentation leads to tenure insecurity, making people susceptible to forced displacements, and frequent land disputes.
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Library Resource
Vol 4, No 1: January 2021
Publication évaluée par des pairsjanvier, 2021ZimbabweExisting land governance system in Zimbabwe subjects vulnerable groups such as women to ‘land corruption’, which entrenches the already existing gendered land inequalities. This study used secondary data and found that Zimbabwe has witnessed various forms of corruption in general and land corruption, in particular, despite the country having the requisite policy, legal and institutional frameworks as well as other mechanisms to curb the scourge of corruption.
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Library Resource
Vol 3, No 1: January 2020, Special Issue 1 on Land Policy in Africa
Publication évaluée par des pairsjanvier, 2020NigériaThe Land Use Act of Nigeria, first enacted in 1978 was intended to simplify and standardise land administration systems across the country. It vested the authority to plan, assign and approve certificates of land ownership in the state governors, and all non-urban land in the local governments.
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Library Resource
Vol 1, No 2: September 2018, Special Issue on Youth and Land Governance
Publication évaluée par des pairsseptembre, 2018AfriqueForced evictions violate a number of internationally and nationally recognized human rights. However, it directly translates to a denial of the right to adequate housing which forms the very foundational basis for the realization of other rights. In the long run, it affects people’s social and economic livelihoods. However, forced evictions remain a practice that is majorly carried out in urban centers in Kenya.
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Library Resource
Vol 3: Special Issue 3, 2020
Publication évaluée par des pairsnovembre, 2020ZimbabweABSTRACT Urban land in Zimbabwe is a lucrative economic and thus political asset. Increased demand for urban land across the country has been driven by multiple factors including high rates of urbanization, increased rural-urban migration, urban population growth and serious challenges in housing provision post-independence. This paper uses desk research to map out the actors and contestations over land.
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Library Resource
Vol 3, No 1: January 2020, Special Issue 1 on Land Policy in Africa
Publication évaluée par des pairsjanvier, 2020BurundiThe concept of Private-Public Partnership was used to provide infrastructure in developed countries for long time and the arrangement was applied by other countries due to its effectiveness and efficiency. This paper tried to explore how Private-Public Partnership is useful in minimising corruption cases in land administration for the case of Bujumbura City. A mixed research approach has been used to collect primary and secondary data. The findings are based on desk review and key informants’ information selected purposively.
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Library Resource
Vol 4, No 1: January 2021
Publication évaluée par des pairsjanvier, 2021ÉthiopieRapid urban population growth and spatial expansion of urban centers have brought unprecedented demand for land in developing countries such as Ethiopia. The dramatic shifts in urban land tenure from Feudal System (pre-1974) to Socialist Land Policy (1974- 1991) and to the current system (post-1991) have left the urban populations uncertain about their property rights. The historical context coupled with the complex legal and institutional structure and the absence of proper records of rights and restrictions have invigorated corruption in the land sector.
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