Combining land-use planning and tenure security: a tenure responsive land-use planning approach for developing countries |
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Authors: | Uchendu Eugene Chigbu Anna Schopf Walter T. de Vries Fahria Masum Samuel Mabikke Danilo Antonio |
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Affiliation: | 1. Chair of Land Management, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany;2. International Consultant in Land Management and Land Tenure, Munich, Germany;3. Land and Global Land Tool Network Unit, Urban Legislation, Land and Governance Branch, United Nations Human Settlement Programme (UN-Habitat), Nairobi, Kenya |
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Abstract: | There is tenure insecurity around land ownerships and land rights in most developing countries. There are also many land-use planning projects being implemented in these countries. Often, land-use planning exists in these countries but is not formally linked with tenure security. This study argues that combining them by conducting land-use planning in a way that promotes tenure security presents a new approach. A central premise for the rationale of this intervention is that processes of land-use planning may inadvertently increase tenure security. By way of methodology, it evaluates land-use planning case studies from Africa, Asia and South America. It uses the three case study examples to build a case for making tenure security one of the major planned outcomes of a land-use planning process and provides a detailed framework for operationalising the concept. Its main contribution to the literature is that it introduces the concept of tenure responsive land-use planning. |
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Keywords: | land tenure land tool land-use planning tenure security tenure responsive |
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