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Statutory recognition of customary land rights in Africa

An investigation into the best practices for lawmaking and implementation












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    Booklet
    Assessing inclusive and participatory mapping for recognizing customary tenure systems in Myanmar 2021
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    Vast amounts of land in Myanmar are not registered. All this land is, in fact, considered as being at the disposal of the Government of the Union of Myanmar, although communities claim it legitimately as customary land. In the absence of specific legal measures for the recognition and protection of community and/or village lands, these systems are under threat of alienation. The National Land Use Policy includes provisions for recognizing customary tenure, but there is currently a legal gap for customary land. Inclusive and participatory mapping could fill this gap and thereby contribute to securing legitimate tenure rights to land, fisheries and forests. Inclusive and participatory mapping of customary tenure has proven to be an effective tool in many countries across the world to empower indigenous peoples and local communities in view of claiming their tenure rights to land and other natural resources. For many it means literally "to be put on the map". Examples of participary mapping in the world and in Myanmar to strengthen customary tenure are assessed and recommendations for the future provided.
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    Book (series)
    Changes in in "customary" land tenure systems in Africa 2006
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    Across rural Africa, land legislation struggles to be properly implemented, and most resource users gain access to land on the basis of local land tenure systems. Although such systems claim to draw their legitimacy from “tradition” and are commonly referred to as “customary” (and for easier reading we will follow this terminology), they have been profoundly changed by decades of colonial and post-independence government interventions, and are continually adapted and reinterpreted as a result of diverse factors like cultural interactions, population pressures, socio-economic change and political processes. Such land tenure systems are extremely diverse, possibly changing from village to village. This diversity is the result of a range of cultural, ecological, social, economic and political factors.
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    Book (series)
    Pacific land tenures: new ideas for reform 2008
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    Land reform is never easy but, after many decades without much change in their land laws, there are signs of a mood for change in the countries of the Pacific. With legal systems which place great emphasis on custom, traditional authority and customary land tenures, land policies and legislation in the Pacific must steer a middle course between the need to encourage growth and economic development, and the fundamental importance of protecting the social, political and cultural values reflected b y customary land tenures. Their land systems aim to protect land ownership at the customary group level, and land use at the individual land developer level.

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