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The Global Land Tool Network (GLTN) contributes to the
implementation of pro poor land policies to achieve
secure land rights for all. Read more...

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May 17th, 2012

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Land management, administration and information - 2009/05/06 08:08 GMT National plans and regulations are critically important in relation to large and valuable land resources that are threatened by environmental degradation or are in high demand. This is also the case where the livelihoods of large populations are at risk due to climate change causing sea water rise, risk of floods and droughts
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Re:Land management, administration and information - 2009/05/06 10:50 GMT National Land Use Plans are critical for sustainable EXPLOITATION of natural resources. However such plans should be developed through the involvement of all to ensure holistic outlook and progressive decisions that addresses all key issues of livelihoods and environmental management.
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Re:Land management, administration and information - 2009/05/07 12:27 GMT Conventional land management and information systems are seriously lacking of livelihoods options.

Entitlements of land ownership must include the classified livelihoods approach.

The diversity of land use pattern in modern times around the globe needs more intellectual attention to make more disciplined pro-poor and pro-people land reform intervention especially for developing countries.

The modern Land measurement and management tools like GIS and LIS can be put effectively in achieving the exact statistics of usable lands , assessing the valuation for taxation, sectoral identification, zoning , planning and regulatory arrangements which boost up public revenue, business, industry, agriculture and service sectors.

Bureaucratic legacy and professional conflict are prevailing obstacles in achieving prompt reform outcomes in land sector.

Regional and international cooperation must be ensured to achieve MDGs in the targeted time frame including standard and benchmarking.
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Remy Sietchiping

 
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Re:Land management, administration and information - 2009/05/08 15:50 GMT Dr Razzak,
You made several good suggestion on the range of possible land tools. Could you now send a list of your priority land tools? You can also suggest new land tools that are not reflected here.
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Re:Land management, administration and information - 2009/05/11 13:34 GMT During the 1960s and 1970s various land reclamation projects were launched in Greater Cairo's Western desert and since then local communities have lost their reclaimed land to developers often linked to or themselves part of the political elite.

The scarcity of water provision and high expenses of maintaining the land for agriculture have led to the failure of most land reclamation projects, which were later leased to real estate speculators and business people who invested bank loans in golf courses and gated resorts, particularly with the increase in land prices which largely affected the supply of social housing for low income groups since the 1990s .

New strategies are therefore needed, in which local communities, non-governmental organizations , housing experts and local authorities work together to tackle the phenomenon of gated communities and associated housing segregation . A stakeholder approach calls for more restrictions on property and land speculations within new settlements, consideration of environmental impact of golf courses on natural desert resources, improvement of infrastructure and transport facilities, spreading security of housing tenure and the lease of public land for subsidized low income housing and upward filtering of decayed housing stock
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Re:Land management, administration and information - 2009/05/11 22:47 GMT There are numerous examples of innovative, pragmatic and cost effective policy instruments to improve access, land tenure security and property rights for the urban poor. Information on these is already in the public domain through the bi-annual World Urban Forum, the bi-annual World Bank Urban Research Symposia, the annual Habitat Awards, Dubai Best Practices, academic publications, bi-lateral and multi-lateral agencies and Google.

The problem is that few of these innovative approaches are being applied or replicated at the scale and speed required. Experience suggests to me that as long as the most influential administrators, politicans and business leaders benefit sufficiently from the status quo, prospects for improvement on the ground will be minimal. GLTN and other stakeholders may therefore need to give priority attention to the political economy within which land management operates in order to identify 'points of leverage' which can facilitate progress in a given location at a given time.
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Stein Holden

 
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Re:Land management, administration and information - 2009/05/12 21:27 GMT I agree with Geoffrey Peyne that the political economy is the primary constraint in most countries but we still also need further testing of different approaches and tools in different contexts where it is feasible to test them out. It may also be easier to argue for pilot testing projects than full-scale projects where the political economy factors are against large-scale reforms. And successful pilots may help build a stronger support for scaling them up.
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