Résultats de la recherche | Land Portal

Résultats de la recherche

Showing items 1 through 9 of 296.
  1. Library Resource
    Manuels et directives
    janvier, 1970
    Éthiopie, Namibie, Burkina Faso, Panama, Brésil, Viet Nam, Jordanie, Roumanie, Royaume-Uni, Allemagne, Samoa

    The Eastern and Anglophone Western Africa Regional Assessment meeting was organized by a task force consisting of FAO, the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, African Land Policy Initiative, the United Nations World Food Programme, United Nations Development Programme, the International Fund for Agricultural Development and the United Nations Human Settlements Programme officials in Ethiopia.

  2. Library Resource
    Manuels et directives
    janvier, 1970
    Chine, Mongolie, Cambodge, Indonésie, Laos, Malaisie, Philippines, Thaïlande, Viet Nam, Bangladesh, Bhoutan, Inde, Maldives, Népal, Finlande, Allemagne

    FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations), Germany, IFAD (International Fund for Agricultural Development), Finland, GTZ (Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit), UN-Habitat, World Bank and UNDP, and IPC (International NGO/CSO Planning Committee for Food Sovereignty), Food First International Action Network (FIAN), ILC (International Land Coalition), FIG (International Federation of Surveyors) and other development partners are working together with countries to prepare Voluntary Guidelines that will provide practical guidance to states, civil society, the private se

  3. Library Resource

    Evidence from 33 Countries

    Rapports et recherches
    mars, 2019
    Maroc, Tunisie, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique, Rwanda, République-Unie de Tanzanie, Ouganda, Zambie, Cameroun, Namibie, Bénin, Burkina Faso, Ghana, Côte d'Ivoire, Libéria, Niger, Nigéria, Sénégal, Costa Rica, Honduras, Mexique, Bolivie, Colombie, Équateur, Pérou, Cambodge, Indonésie, Thaïlande, Viet Nam, Jordanie, Royaume-Uni

    This report uses household-level data from 33, mostly developing, countries to analyse perceptions of tenure insecurity among women. We test two hypotheses: (1) that women feel more insecure than men; and (2) that increasing statutory protections for women, for instance by issuing joint named titles or making inheritance law more gender equal, increases de facto tenure security.

  4. Library Resource
    Articles et Livres
    janvier, 2001
    Égypte, Mozambique, Viet Nam, République arabe syrienne

    Articles in this edition develop several areas and introduce specific experiences relating to land reform. The main thread running through the articles is that of change; how we can help to understand what change means and how it can be managed.

  5. Library Resource
    Rapports et recherches
    janvier, 2015
    Asie méridionale, Viet Nam, Bangladesh, Tadjikistan, Timor-Leste

    This paper reviews the available data on men’s and women’s land rights, identifies what can and cannot be measured by these data, and uses these measures to assess the gaps in the land rights of women and men. Building on the conceptual framework developed in 2014 by Doss et al., we utilize nationally representative individual- and plot-level data from Bangladesh, Tajikistan, Vietnam, and Timor-Leste to calculate five indicators: incidence of ownership by sex; distribution of ownership by sex; and distribution of plots, mean plot size, and distribution of land area, all by sex of owner.

  6. Library Resource
    Challenges and opportunities of recognizing and protecting customary tenure systems in Viet Nam
    Documents de politique et mémoires
    décembre, 2019
    Viet Nam

    This policy brief was developed in order to enable a meaningful engagement and policy dialogue with government institutions and other relevant stakeholders about challenges and opportunities related to recognizing customary tenure in Viet Nam.

  7. Library Resource
    Diamonds in the Delta

    Manifesto

    Matériels institutionnels et promotionnels
    décembre, 2021
    Mozambique, Colombie, Indonésie, Philippines, Viet Nam, Bangladesh, Pays-Bas

    Diamonds in the Delta (DiD) is an international research-action network of scholars, water professionals and civil society advocates who are concerned about how climate change compounds problems of flooding and subsidence in delta cities. We – the people in the network – are united in our conviction that the needs, experiences and aspirations of communities that are actually or potentially most affected by these problems should be the focus when designing and implementing solutions.

  8. Library Resource
    Gender, tenure and customary practices in forest landscapes
    Rapports et recherches
    décembre, 2022
    Cambodge, Indonésie, Laos, Myanmar, Thaïlande, Viet Nam, Népal

    This report is based on 10 research projects carried out in 18 sites in seven countries: Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Myanmar, Nepal, Thailand and Viet Nam. The studies formed the basis of ten informational briefs from the research sites published together with the report (available here: https://www.recoftc.org/publications/0000432). Each study documented the legal frameworks and customary practices that affect indigenous women’s rights to access and manage forest resources and create restrictions on those rights.

  9. Library Resource
    Pathways for the recognition of customary forest tenure in the Mekong region
    Rapports et recherches
    novembre, 2022
    Cambodge, Laos, Myanmar, Thaïlande, Viet Nam

    Globally, about 2 billion people claim ownership of their homes and lands through a customary tenure system. Customary tenure has long been insecure and is under growing pressure in many places. But it is also increasingly recognized through a variety of mechanisms, formal and informal. RECOFTC released a new report on the recognition of customary tenure of communities living in forested landscapes in Cambodia, Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Myanmar and Viet Nam. It also includes a case study from Thailand.

  10. Library Resource
    Articles et Livres
    décembre, 2014
    Viet Nam

    This paper examines how people mobilize around notions of distributive justice, or ‘moral economies’, to make claims to resources, using the process of post‐socialist land privatization in the Mekong Delta region of southern Vietnam as a case study. First, I argue that the region's history of settlement, production and political struggle helped to entrench certain normative beliefs around landownership, most notably in its population of semi‐commercial upper peasants.

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