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Land reform

Land reform is a form of agrarian reform involving the changing of laws, regulations, or customs regarding land ownership.[1] Land reform may consist of a government-initiated or government-backed property redistribution, generally of agricultural land. Land reform can, therefore, refer to transfer of ownership from the more powerful to the less powerful, such as from a relatively small number of wealthy or noble owners with extensive land holdings (e.g., plantations, large ranches, or agribusiness plots) to individual ownership by those who work the land.[2] Such transfers of ownership may be with or without compensation; compensation may vary from token amounts to the full value of the land.[3]

Farmers protesting for land reform in Indonesia, 2004

Land reform may also entail the transfer of land from individual ownership—even peasant ownership in smallholdings—to government-owned collective farms; it has also, in other times and places, referred to the exact opposite: division of government-owned collective farms into smallholdings.[4] The common characteristic of all land reforms, however, is modification or replacement of existing institutional arrangements governing possession and use of land. Thus, while land reform may be radical in nature, such as through large-scale transfers of land from one group to another, it can also be less dramatic, such as regulatory reforms aimed at improving land administration.[5]

Nonetheless, any revision or reform of a country's land laws can still be an intensely political process, as reforming land policies serves to change relationships within and between communities, as well as between communities and the state. Thus even small-scale land reforms and legal modifications may be subject to intense debate or conflict.[6]

Land usage and tenure

Land ownership and tenure can be perceived as controversial in part because ideas defining what it means to access or control land, such as through "land ownership" or "land tenure", can vary considerably across regions and even within countries.[7] Land reforms, which change what it means to control land, therefore create tensions and conflicts between those who lose and those who gain from these redefinitions (see next section).[8]

Western conceptions of land have evolved over the past several centuries to place greater emphasis on individual land ownership, formalized through documents such as land titles.[9] Control over land, however, may also be perceived less in terms of individual ownership and more in terms of land use, or through what is known as land tenure.[10] Historically, in many parts of Africa for example, land was not owned by an individual, but rather used by an extended family or a village community. Different people in a family or community had different rights to access this land for different purposes and at different times. Such rights were often conveyed through oral history and not formally documented.[11]

These different ideas of land ownership and tenure are sometimes referred to using different terminology. For example, "formal" or "statutory" land systems refer to ideas of land control more closely affiliated with individual land ownership. "Informal" or "customary" land systems refer to ideas of land control more closely affiliated with land tenure.[12]

Terms dictating control over and use of land can therefore take many forms. Some specific examples of present-day or historic forms of formal and informal land ownership include:

  • Traditional land tenure, as practiced by the indigenous tribes of Pre-Columbian North America.
  • Feudal land ownership, through fiefdoms
  • Life estate, interest in real property that ends at death.
  • Fee tail, hereditary, non-transferable ownership of real property.
  • Fee simple. Under common law, this is the most complete ownership interest one can have in real property.
  • Leasehold or rental
  • Rights to use a common
  • Sharecropping
  • Run rig and rundale
  • Well-Field System
  • Easements
  • Kibbutz and moshav
  • Satoyama
  • Agricultural labor – under which someone works the land in exchange for money, payment in kind, or some combination of the two
  • Collective ownership
  • Access to land through a membership in a cooperative, or shares in a corporation, which owns the land (typically by fee simple or its equivalent, but possibly under other arrangements).
  • Government collectives, such as those that might be found in communist states, whereby government ownership of most agricultural land is combined in various ways with tenure for farming collectives.

Motivation

Land reform is a deeply political process[13] and therefore many arguments for and against it have emerged. These arguments vary tremendously over time and place. In the twentieth century, many land reforms emerged from a particular political ideology, such as communism or socialism. In the 19th century in colonized states, a colonial government may have changed the laws dictating land ownership to better consolidate political power or to support its colonial economy.[14] In more recent times, electoral mobilization and the use of land as a patronage resource have been proposed as possible motivations for land reform efforts, such as the extensive redistributive land reforms of Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe.[15]

Arguments for

Arguments in support of land reform focus on its potential social and economic benefits, particularly in developing countries, that may emerge from reforms focused on greater land formalization. Such benefits may include eradicating food insecurity and alleviating rural poverty.[16]

And the great owners, who must lose their land in an upheaval, the great owners with access to history, with eyes to read history and to know the great fact: when property accumulates in too few hands it is taken away. And that companion fact: when a majority of the people are hungry and cold they will take by force what they need. And the little screaming fact that sounds through all history: repression works only to strengthen and knit the repressed.

Arguments in support of such reforms gained particular momentum after the publication of The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else by Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto in 2000. The poor, he argues, are often unable to secure formal property rights, such as land titles, to the land on which they live or farm because of poor governance, corruption and/or overly complex bureaucracies. Without land titles or other formal documentation of their land assets, they are less able to access formal credit. Political and legal reforms within countries, according to de Soto, will help to include the poor in formal legal and economic systems, increase the poor's ability to access credit and contribute to economic growth and poverty reduction.[18]

Many international development organizations and bilateral and multilateral donors, such as the World Bank, have embraced de Soto's ideas, or similar ideas, about the benefits of greater formalized land rights.[19] This has translated into a number of development programs that work with governments and civil society organizations to initiate and implement land reforms.[20] Evidence to support the economic and pro-poor benefits of increased formalized land rights are, however, still inconclusive according to some critics (see "Arguments against land reform" below).

Other arguments in support of land reform point to the need to alleviate conflicting land laws, particularly in former colonies, where formal and informal land systems may exist in tension with each other.[21] Such conflicts can make marginalized groups vulnerable to further exploitation.[22] For example, in many countries in Africa with conflicting land laws, AIDS stigmatization has led to an increasing number of AIDS widows being kicked off marital land by in-laws.[23] While the woman may have both customary and statutory rights to the land, confusion over which set of laws has primacy, or even a lack of knowledge of relevant laws, leave many AIDS widows at a significant disadvantage. Also, conflicting formal and informal land laws can also clog a country's legal system, making it prone to corruption.[24]

Additional arguments for land reform focus on the potential environmental benefits of reform. For example, if reform leads to greater security of land ownership, through either formal or informal means, then those that use the land will be better stewards of it.[25]

Land reforms carried out in Japan, Taiwan and South Korea are credited with contributing to the industrial development. The equitable distribution of land led to increasing agricultural outputs, high rural purchasing power and social mobility.[26]

Arguments against

Many of the arguments in support of land reform speak to its potentially positive social and economic outcomes. Yet, as mentioned previously, land reform is an intensely political process.[8] Thus, many of those opposed to land reform are nervous as to the underlying motivations of those initiating the reform. For example, some may fear that they will be disadvantaged or victimized as a result of the reforms. Others may fear that they will lose out in the economic and political power struggles that underlie many land reforms.[27]

Other groups and individuals express concerns about land reforms focused on formalization of property rights. While the economic and social benefits of formalized land rights are often touted, some research suggests that such reforms are either ineffective or may cause further hardship or conflict.[28]

Additional arguments against land reform focus on concerns over equity issues and potential elite capture of land, particularly in regards to reforms focused on greater land formalization. If improperly or inadequately implemented, critics worry that such reforms may further disadvantage marginalized groups such as indigenous communities or women.[29] These concerns also lead to questions about the institutional capacity of governments to implement land reforms as they are designed. Even if a country does have this capacity, critics worry that corruption and patrimonialism will lead to further elite capture.[30]

In looking at more radical reforms, such as large-scale land redistribution, arguments against reform include concerns that redistributed land will not be used productively and that owners of expropriated land will not be compensated adequately or compensated at all. Zimbabwe, again, is a commonly cited example of the perils of such large-scale reforms, whereby land redistribution contributed to economic decline and increased food insecurity in the country.[31] In cases where land reform has been enacted as part of socialist collectivization, many of the arguments against collectivization more generally apply.

National efforts

An early example of land reform was the Irish Land Acts of 1870–1909. Most all newly independent countries of Eastern and Central Europe implemented land reforms in the aftermath of World War I. In most countries, the land in excess of certain limits (20–500 ha (49–1,236 acres), depending on the region and type of land) was expropriated; in Finland, it was redeemed and placed into a special fund.[32]

See also

References

  1. ^ Batty, Fodei Joseph. "Pressures from Above, Below and Both Directions: The Politics of Land Reform in South Africa, Brazil and Zimbabwe." Western Michigan University. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Chicago, Illinois. April 7–10, 2005. p. 3. [1]
  2. ^ Borras, Saturnino M. Jr. "The Philippine Land form in Comparative Perspective: Some conceptual and Methodological Implications." Journal of Agrarian Change. 6,1 (January 2006): 69–101.
  3. ^ Adams, Martin and J. Howell. "Redistributive Land Reform in Southern Africa." Overseas Development Institute. DFID. Natural Resources Perspectives No. 64. January 2001. [2] 2009-12-05 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Adams, Martin and J. Howell. "Redistributive Land Reform in Southern Africa." 2009-12-05 at the Wayback Machine Overseas Development Institute. DFID. Natural Resources Perspectives No. 64. January 2001.
  5. ^ Ghana's Land Administration Project 2011-07-21 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Lund, Christian. Local Politics and the Dynamics of Property in Africa. Cambridge University Press: New York. 2008.
  7. ^ La Croix, Sumner. "Land Tenure: An Introduction." Working Paper no. 02-13. May 2002. University of Hawaii.
  8. ^ a b Boone, Catherine. "Property and Constitutional Order: Land Tenure reform and the Future of the African State." African Affairs. 2007. 106: 557–586.
  9. ^ Locke, John. Two Treatises of Government. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [1689] 1991. and Smith, Adam. The Wealth of Nations. Books 1—III. London: Penguin Books. 1999.
  10. ^ "What is land tenure?" Food and Agriculture Organization.
  11. ^ Dekker, Henri A.L. The Invisible Line: Land Reform, Land Tenure Security and Land Registration. Ashgate: Burlington, 2003. p. 2.
  12. ^ "Land Law." Law and Development. The World Bank. February 23, 2007. [3],
  13. ^ : Boone, Catherine. "Property and Constitutional Order: Land Tenure reform and the Future of the African State." African Affairs. 2007. 106: 557–86. and Manji, Ambreena. The Politics of Land Reform in Ghana: From Communal Tenure to Free Markets. Zed Books: New York. 2006.
  14. ^ Berry, Sata. "Debating the land question in Africa." Johns Hopkins University. N.d. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-01-13. Retrieved 2010-12-02.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. ^ Boone, Catherine and N. Kriger. "Multiparty elections and land patronage: Zimbabwe and Cote d'Ivoire." Commonwealth and Comparative Politics. 48,1 (April 2010): 173–202.
  16. ^ Meinzen-Dick, Ruth, Markelova, Helen and Moore, Kelsey. "The Role of Collective Action and Property Rights in Climate Change Strategies." International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), 2010. and Economic Commission for Africa. "Land Tenure Systems and their Impacts on Food security and Sustainable Development in Africa." 2009.
  17. ^ The Grapes of Wrath, by John Steinbeck, Penguin, 2006, 0143039431, pg 238
  18. ^ De Soto, Hernando. The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else. New York: Basic Books. 2000.
  19. ^ Deininger, Klaus W. Land Policies for Growth and Poverty Reduction. The World Bank. 2003. [4]
  20. ^ World Bank. "Regional Study on Land Administration, Land Markets, and Collateralized Lending." 2003. [5]
  21. ^ Moore, Jina. "Africa's continental divide: land disputes." Christian Science Monitor. January 30, 2010. [6]
  22. ^ Kafmbe, Anthony Luyirika. "Access to Justice: Widows and the Institutions Regulating Succession to Property in Uganda." Human Rights Review; Jul2006, Vol. 7 Issue 4, pp. 100–113.
  23. ^ Ambasa-Shisanya, Constance. "Widowhood in the Era of HIV/AIDS: A Case Study of the Slaya District, Kenya." Journal of Social Aspects of HIV/AIDS. August 2007. 2:2, 606–615.
  24. ^ Tettey, Wisdom, B. Gebe and K. Ansah-Koi. "The Politics of Land and Land-related Conflicts in Ghana: A Summary." Land Policy Reform Project. Institute for Statistical, Social and Economic Research at the University of Ghana. 2008. [7] 2020-03-07 at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ World Resources Institute. "The Wealth of the Poor: Managing Ecosystems to Fight Poverty." 2005. . Archived from the original on 2011-08-07. Retrieved 2010-12-02. and Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). "Land Tenure and Rural Development." FAO Land Tenure Studies No. 3. 2002. Accessed August 21, 2010. Available: [8][permanent dead link]
  26. ^ "Land: The Triumph of Gardening". How Asia Works: Success and Failure in the World's Most Dynamic Region. Grove Press. 2014. ISBN 9780802121325.
  27. ^ "A chance to improve how Kenya is run." The Economist. July 29, 2010
  28. ^ Bourbeau, Heather, "Property Wrongs." Foreign Policy. Nov/Dec 2001. Issue 127, pp. 78–79 and Nyamu Musembi, Celestine. "De Soto and Land Relations in rural Africa: breathing life into dead theories about property rights." Third World Quarterly. 2007. 28:8, 1457–1478.
  29. ^ Drimie, Scott. "The Impact of HIV/AIDS on Land: Case Studies from Kenya, Lesotho and South Africa." Food and Agriculture Organization. August 2002. and Varley, Ann. "Gender and Property Formalization: Conventional and Alternative Approaches." World Development. October 2007. 35:10, 1739–1753.
  30. ^ Gender in Agriculture Source Book. The World Bank, FAO and IFAD. 2009.[9]
  31. ^ "From breadbasket to basket case." The Economist. June 27, 2002
  32. ^ Gediminas Vaskela. The Land Reform of 1919–1940: Lithuania and the Countries of East and Central Europe 2012-03-22 at the Wayback Machine

Further reading

  • Bernstein, H. (2002). "Land Reform: Taking a Long(er) View". Journal of Agrarian Change. 2 (4): 433–463. doi:10.1111/1471-0366.00042.
  • Caralee McLiesh and Richard E. Messick, Moderators. (2004). . World Bank.
  • Ciparisse, Gérard. (2003). . Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the UN. ISBN 9251042837.
  • Cahill, Kevin. "Who Owns The World: The Hidden Facts Behind Landownership", Mainstream Publishing, 2006, ISBN 9781845961589. OCLC 746882317.
    • Cahill, Kevin. "Who Owns Britain: The Hidden Facts Behind Landownership in the UK and Ireland", Canongate Books, 2002. ISBN 9781841953106. OCLC 1015469648.
  • Michael Lipton, Land Reform in Developing Countries: Property rights and property wrongs, Routledge, 2009
  • R. H. Tawney, Land and Labour in China New York, Harcourt Brace & Company (1979). 3rd Edition. ISBN 9780374977719. OCLC 709358069.
  • Fu Chen, Liming Wang and John Davis, , , a publication of the Sustainable Development Department of the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
  • William H. Hinton. Fanshen: A Documentary of Revolution in a Chinese Village. New York: Monthly Review Press, 1966. ISBN 9780520210400. OCLC 258568918.
  • Ho, Peter. (2001, June). , The China Quarterly, Vol. 166, June 2001, pp. 387–414
    • Ho, Peter. (2006). "Institutions In Transition: Land Ownership, Property Rights and Social Conflict in China. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199280698. OCLC 1292686440.
  • Mark Moyar. "Villager attitudes during the final decade of the Vietnam War". Presented at 1996 Vietnam Symposium "After the Cold War: Reassessing Vietnam".
  • on site of TEHO magazine.
  • Rudzani Albert Makhado and Kgabo Lawrance Masehela. (2012). Perspectives on South Africa's Land Reform Debate. Lambert Academic Publishing, Germany. ISBN 9783845416076. OCLC 935209055.
  • Henry George, "Progress and Poverty: An inquiry into the cause of industrial depressions and of increase of want with increase of wealth: the remedy", 1879.
  • Groppo, Paolo. (1998). . Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the UN.
  • Krogh, Peter Frederic. (1986). U.S. and Third World Land Reform. American Interests. Dean Peter Krogh Foreign Affairs Digital Archives. School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University.
  • Goodman, Amy. (2010). Global Food Security and Sovereignty Threatened by Corporate and Government “Land Grabs” in Poor Countries. Democracy Now!.
  • Wallace, Alfred Russel. (1882). Land Nationalisation: Its necessity and its aims: Being a comparison of the system of landlord and tenant with that of occupying ownership in their influence on the well-being of the people.

External links

  • .
  • Landesa - Securing land rights for the world's poorest.

land, reform, land, question, redirects, here, land, question, ireland, land, acts, ireland, also, country, form, agrarian, reform, involving, changing, laws, regulations, customs, regarding, land, ownership, consist, government, initiated, government, backed,. Land Question redirects here For the land question in Ireland see Land Acts Ireland See also Land reforms by country Land reform is a form of agrarian reform involving the changing of laws regulations or customs regarding land ownership 1 Land reform may consist of a government initiated or government backed property redistribution generally of agricultural land Land reform can therefore refer to transfer of ownership from the more powerful to the less powerful such as from a relatively small number of wealthy or noble owners with extensive land holdings e g plantations large ranches or agribusiness plots to individual ownership by those who work the land 2 Such transfers of ownership may be with or without compensation compensation may vary from token amounts to the full value of the land 3 Farmers protesting for land reform in Indonesia 2004 Land reform may also entail the transfer of land from individual ownership even peasant ownership in smallholdings to government owned collective farms it has also in other times and places referred to the exact opposite division of government owned collective farms into smallholdings 4 The common characteristic of all land reforms however is modification or replacement of existing institutional arrangements governing possession and use of land Thus while land reform may be radical in nature such as through large scale transfers of land from one group to another it can also be less dramatic such as regulatory reforms aimed at improving land administration 5 Nonetheless any revision or reform of a country s land laws can still be an intensely political process as reforming land policies serves to change relationships within and between communities as well as between communities and the state Thus even small scale land reforms and legal modifications may be subject to intense debate or conflict 6 Contents 1 Land usage and tenure 2 Motivation 2 1 Arguments for 2 2 Arguments against 3 National efforts 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksLand usage and tenure EditMain article Land ownership and tenure Land ownership and tenure can be perceived as controversial in part because ideas defining what it means to access or control land such as through land ownership or land tenure can vary considerably across regions and even within countries 7 Land reforms which change what it means to control land therefore create tensions and conflicts between those who lose and those who gain from these redefinitions see next section 8 Western conceptions of land have evolved over the past several centuries to place greater emphasis on individual land ownership formalized through documents such as land titles 9 Control over land however may also be perceived less in terms of individual ownership and more in terms of land use or through what is known as land tenure 10 Historically in many parts of Africa for example land was not owned by an individual but rather used by an extended family or a village community Different people in a family or community had different rights to access this land for different purposes and at different times Such rights were often conveyed through oral history and not formally documented 11 These different ideas of land ownership and tenure are sometimes referred to using different terminology For example formal or statutory land systems refer to ideas of land control more closely affiliated with individual land ownership Informal or customary land systems refer to ideas of land control more closely affiliated with land tenure 12 Terms dictating control over and use of land can therefore take many forms Some specific examples of present day or historic forms of formal and informal land ownership include Traditional land tenure as practiced by the indigenous tribes of Pre Columbian North America Feudal land ownership through fiefdoms Life estate interest in real property that ends at death Fee tail hereditary non transferable ownership of real property Fee simple Under common law this is the most complete ownership interest one can have in real property Leasehold or rental Rights to use a common Sharecropping Run rig and rundale Well Field System Easements Kibbutz and moshav Satoyama Agricultural labor under which someone works the land in exchange for money payment in kind or some combination of the two Collective ownership Access to land through a membership in a cooperative or shares in a corporation which owns the land typically by fee simple or its equivalent but possibly under other arrangements Government collectives such as those that might be found in communist states whereby government ownership of most agricultural land is combined in various ways with tenure for farming collectives Motivation EditSee also Property redistribution Land reform is a deeply political process 13 and therefore many arguments for and against it have emerged These arguments vary tremendously over time and place In the twentieth century many land reforms emerged from a particular political ideology such as communism or socialism In the 19th century in colonized states a colonial government may have changed the laws dictating land ownership to better consolidate political power or to support its colonial economy 14 In more recent times electoral mobilization and the use of land as a patronage resource have been proposed as possible motivations for land reform efforts such as the extensive redistributive land reforms of Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe 15 Arguments for Edit Arguments in support of land reform focus on its potential social and economic benefits particularly in developing countries that may emerge from reforms focused on greater land formalization Such benefits may include eradicating food insecurity and alleviating rural poverty 16 And the great owners who must lose their land in an upheaval the great owners with access to history with eyes to read history and to know the great fact when property accumulates in too few hands it is taken away And that companion fact when a majority of the people are hungry and cold they will take by force what they need And the little screaming fact that sounds through all history repression works only to strengthen and knit the repressed The Grapes of Wrath 17 Arguments in support of such reforms gained particular momentum after the publication of The Mystery of Capital Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else by Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto in 2000 The poor he argues are often unable to secure formal property rights such as land titles to the land on which they live or farm because of poor governance corruption and or overly complex bureaucracies Without land titles or other formal documentation of their land assets they are less able to access formal credit Political and legal reforms within countries according to de Soto will help to include the poor in formal legal and economic systems increase the poor s ability to access credit and contribute to economic growth and poverty reduction 18 Many international development organizations and bilateral and multilateral donors such as the World Bank have embraced de Soto s ideas or similar ideas about the benefits of greater formalized land rights 19 This has translated into a number of development programs that work with governments and civil society organizations to initiate and implement land reforms 20 Evidence to support the economic and pro poor benefits of increased formalized land rights are however still inconclusive according to some critics see Arguments against land reform below Other arguments in support of land reform point to the need to alleviate conflicting land laws particularly in former colonies where formal and informal land systems may exist in tension with each other 21 Such conflicts can make marginalized groups vulnerable to further exploitation 22 For example in many countries in Africa with conflicting land laws AIDS stigmatization has led to an increasing number of AIDS widows being kicked off marital land by in laws 23 While the woman may have both customary and statutory rights to the land confusion over which set of laws has primacy or even a lack of knowledge of relevant laws leave many AIDS widows at a significant disadvantage Also conflicting formal and informal land laws can also clog a country s legal system making it prone to corruption 24 Additional arguments for land reform focus on the potential environmental benefits of reform For example if reform leads to greater security of land ownership through either formal or informal means then those that use the land will be better stewards of it 25 Land reforms carried out in Japan Taiwan and South Korea are credited with contributing to the industrial development The equitable distribution of land led to increasing agricultural outputs high rural purchasing power and social mobility 26 Arguments against Edit Many of the arguments in support of land reform speak to its potentially positive social and economic outcomes Yet as mentioned previously land reform is an intensely political process 8 Thus many of those opposed to land reform are nervous as to the underlying motivations of those initiating the reform For example some may fear that they will be disadvantaged or victimized as a result of the reforms Others may fear that they will lose out in the economic and political power struggles that underlie many land reforms 27 Other groups and individuals express concerns about land reforms focused on formalization of property rights While the economic and social benefits of formalized land rights are often touted some research suggests that such reforms are either ineffective or may cause further hardship or conflict 28 Additional arguments against land reform focus on concerns over equity issues and potential elite capture of land particularly in regards to reforms focused on greater land formalization If improperly or inadequately implemented critics worry that such reforms may further disadvantage marginalized groups such as indigenous communities or women 29 These concerns also lead to questions about the institutional capacity of governments to implement land reforms as they are designed Even if a country does have this capacity critics worry that corruption and patrimonialism will lead to further elite capture 30 In looking at more radical reforms such as large scale land redistribution arguments against reform include concerns that redistributed land will not be used productively and that owners of expropriated land will not be compensated adequately or compensated at all Zimbabwe again is a commonly cited example of the perils of such large scale reforms whereby land redistribution contributed to economic decline and increased food insecurity in the country 31 In cases where land reform has been enacted as part of socialist collectivization many of the arguments against collectivization more generally apply National efforts EditMain article Land reforms by country An early example of land reform was the Irish Land Acts of 1870 1909 Most all newly independent countries of Eastern and Central Europe implemented land reforms in the aftermath of World War I In most countries the land in excess of certain limits 20 500 ha 49 1 236 acres depending on the region and type of land was expropriated in Finland it was redeemed and placed into a special fund 32 See also EditAdverse possession Agrarian Justice Agrarian reform Certificate of occupancy Chinese Land Reform Citizen s Dividend Concentration of land ownership Classical rent Collectivization in the Soviet Union Common land Dekulakization Differential and absolute ground rent Eminent domain Enclosure Freiwirtschaft Frente Unido de Reforma Agraria Gentrification Georgism Homestead principle Land economics Land Acts Ireland Land banking Land claim Land consumption Land grabbing Land law Landlessness Land consolidation Land Reform in Developing Countries Land reforms by country Land tenure Land titling Land value tax Manorialism Mexico Indigena Mutualism Natural capital Nonpossessory interest in land Profit real property Real estate appraisal Restitution Serfdom Settler Speculation Squatting Stolypin reform Usufruct Water scarcity ZapatismoReferences Edit Batty Fodei Joseph Pressures from Above Below and Both Directions The Politics of Land Reform in South Africa Brazil and Zimbabwe Western Michigan University Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association Chicago Illinois April 7 10 2005 p 3 1 Borras Saturnino M Jr The Philippine Land form in Comparative Perspective Some conceptual and Methodological Implications Journal of Agrarian Change 6 1 January 2006 69 101 Adams Martin and J Howell Redistributive Land Reform in Southern Africa Overseas Development Institute DFID Natural Resources Perspectives No 64 January 2001 2 Archived 2009 12 05 at the Wayback Machine Adams Martin and J Howell Redistributive Land Reform in Southern Africa Archived 2009 12 05 at the Wayback Machine Overseas Development Institute DFID Natural Resources Perspectives No 64 January 2001 Ghana s Land Administration Project Archived 2011 07 21 at the Wayback Machine Lund Christian Local Politics and the Dynamics of Property in Africa Cambridge University Press New York 2008 La Croix Sumner Land Tenure An Introduction Working Paper no 02 13 May 2002 University of Hawaii a b Boone Catherine Property and Constitutional Order Land Tenure reform and the Future of the African State African Affairs 2007 106 557 586 Locke John Two Treatises of Government Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1689 1991 and Smith Adam The Wealth of Nations Books 1 III London Penguin Books 1999 What is land tenure Food and Agriculture Organization Dekker Henri A L The Invisible Line Land Reform Land Tenure Security and Land Registration Ashgate Burlington 2003 p 2 Land Law Law and Development The World Bank February 23 2007 3 Boone Catherine Property and Constitutional Order Land Tenure reform and the Future of the African State African Affairs 2007 106 557 86 and Manji Ambreena The Politics of Land Reform in Ghana From Communal Tenure to Free Markets Zed Books New York 2006 Berry Sata Debating the land question in Africa Johns Hopkins University N d Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 01 13 Retrieved 2010 12 02 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Boone Catherine and N Kriger Multiparty elections and land patronage Zimbabwe and Cote d Ivoire Commonwealth and Comparative Politics 48 1 April 2010 173 202 Meinzen Dick Ruth Markelova Helen and Moore Kelsey The Role of Collective Action and Property Rights in Climate Change Strategies International Food Policy Research Institute IFPRI 2010 and Economic Commission for Africa Land Tenure Systems and their Impacts on Food security and Sustainable Development in Africa 2009 The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck Penguin 2006 0143039431 pg 238 De Soto Hernando The Mystery of Capital Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else New York Basic Books 2000 Deininger Klaus W Land Policies for Growth and Poverty Reduction The World Bank 2003 4 World Bank Regional Study on Land Administration Land Markets and Collateralized Lending 2003 5 Moore Jina Africa s continental divide land disputes Christian Science Monitor January 30 2010 6 Kafmbe Anthony Luyirika Access to Justice Widows and the Institutions Regulating Succession to Property in Uganda Human Rights Review Jul2006 Vol 7 Issue 4 pp 100 113 Ambasa Shisanya Constance Widowhood in the Era of HIV AIDS A Case Study of the Slaya District Kenya Journal of Social Aspects of HIV AIDS August 2007 2 2 606 615 Tettey Wisdom B Gebe and K Ansah Koi The Politics of Land and Land related Conflicts in Ghana A Summary Land Policy Reform Project Institute for Statistical Social and Economic Research at the University of Ghana 2008 7 Archived 2020 03 07 at the Wayback Machine World Resources Institute The Wealth of the Poor Managing Ecosystems to Fight Poverty 2005 World Resources 2005 the Wealth of the Poor Managing ecosystems to fight poverty World Resources Institute Archived from the original on 2011 08 07 Retrieved 2010 12 02 and Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations FAO Land Tenure and Rural Development FAO Land Tenure Studies No 3 2002 Accessed August 21 2010 Available 8 permanent dead link Land The Triumph of Gardening How Asia Works Success and Failure in the World s Most Dynamic Region Grove Press 2014 ISBN 9780802121325 A chance to improve how Kenya is run The Economist July 29 2010 Bourbeau Heather Property Wrongs Foreign Policy Nov Dec 2001 Issue 127 pp 78 79 and Nyamu Musembi Celestine De Soto and Land Relations in rural Africa breathing life into dead theories about property rights Third World Quarterly 2007 28 8 1457 1478 Drimie Scott The Impact of HIV AIDS on Land Case Studies from Kenya Lesotho and South Africa Food and Agriculture Organization August 2002 and Varley Ann Gender and Property Formalization Conventional and Alternative Approaches World Development October 2007 35 10 1739 1753 Gender in Agriculture Source Book The World Bank FAO and IFAD 2009 9 From breadbasket to basket case The Economist June 27 2002 Gediminas Vaskela The Land Reform of 1919 1940 Lithuania and the Countries of East and Central Europe Archived 2012 03 22 at the Wayback MachineFurther reading EditBernstein H 2002 Land Reform Taking a Long er View Journal of Agrarian Change 2 4 433 463 doi 10 1111 1471 0366 00042 Caralee McLiesh and Richard E Messick Moderators 2004 Can Formal Property Titling Programs Ensure Increased Business Investments and Growth World Bank Ciparisse Gerard 2003 Multilingual Thesaurus on Land Tenure Food and Agriculture Organization FAO of the UN ISBN 9251042837 Cahill Kevin Who Owns The World The Hidden Facts Behind Landownership Mainstream Publishing 2006 ISBN 9781845961589 OCLC 746882317 Cahill Kevin Who Owns Britain The Hidden Facts Behind Landownership in the UK and Ireland Canongate Books 2002 ISBN 9781841953106 OCLC 1015469648 Michael Lipton Land Reform in Developing Countries Property rights and property wrongs Routledge 2009 R H Tawney Land and Labour in China New York Harcourt Brace amp Company 1979 3rd Edition ISBN 9780374977719 OCLC 709358069 Fu Chen Liming Wang and John Davis Land reform in rural China since the mid 1980s Land Reform 1998 2 a publication of the Sustainable Development Department of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization FAO William H Hinton Fanshen A Documentary of Revolution in a Chinese Village New York Monthly Review Press 1966 ISBN 9780520210400 OCLC 258568918 Ho Peter 2001 June Who Owns China s Land Policies Property Rights and Deliberate Institutional Ambiguity The China Quarterly Vol 166 June 2001 pp 387 414 Ho Peter 2006 Institutions In Transition Land Ownership Property Rights and Social Conflict in China Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199280698 OCLC 1292686440 Mark Moyar Villager attitudes during the final decade of the Vietnam War Presented at 1996 Vietnam Symposium After the Cold War Reassessing Vietnam Summary of Efficiency and wellbeing for 80 years by Tarmo Luoma on site of TEHO magazine Rudzani Albert Makhado and Kgabo Lawrance Masehela 2012 Perspectives on South Africa s Land Reform Debate Lambert Academic Publishing Germany ISBN 9783845416076 OCLC 935209055 Henry George Progress and Poverty An inquiry into the cause of industrial depressions and of increase of want with increase of wealth the remedy 1879 Groppo Paolo 1998 Land Reform Land Settlement and Cooperatives Bulletin Food and Agriculture Organization FAO of the UN Krogh Peter Frederic 1986 U S and Third World Land Reform American Interests Dean Peter Krogh Foreign Affairs Digital Archives School of Foreign Service Georgetown University Goodman Amy 2010 Global Food Security and Sovereignty Threatened by Corporate and Government Land Grabs in Poor Countries Democracy Now Wallace Alfred Russel 1882 Land Nationalisation Its necessity and its aims Being a comparison of the system of landlord and tenant with that of occupying ownership in their influence on the well being of the people External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Land reform Land Research Action Network News Analysis and Research on Land Reform Land Territory and Dignity Forum Landesa Securing land rights for the world s poorest Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Land reform amp oldid 1128355780, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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