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Amman | Johannesburg | London | Mexico City | Ramallah | Washington African Land Tenure Where are we now? Richard Baldwin, Felicity Buckle, Owen Edwards,

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Presentation on theme: "Amman | Johannesburg | London | Mexico City | Ramallah | Washington African Land Tenure Where are we now? Richard Baldwin, Felicity Buckle, Owen Edwards,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Amman | Johannesburg | London | Mexico City | Ramallah | Washington African Land Tenure Where are we now? Richard Baldwin, Felicity Buckle, Owen Edwards, Clive English, John Leckie DAI Lands Group.

2 Contents 1.Introduction 2.Intervention Paradigms 3.Land Tenure issues in Africa 4.Lessons Learned and Emergent Best Practice 5.Next steps

3 Introduction  Well documented history of interventions in land tenure projects starting from Thailand 1980’s (Bank supported)  In ECA region 1994-2015 - World Bank projects - over 40 projects and USD1.2 billion (Torhonen) – leveraged X 10  In Africa – by 2012, World Bank projects USD 229 million (Byamagushi) – leverage?  By 2015 most Eastern Europe land tenure systems largely established and functional – why did it work?  What can we do to achieve the same in Africa?  Are we on the right track?  Do we have the right models and intervention tools?

4 1.Introduction 2.Intervention Paradigms 3.Land Tenure issues in Africa 4.Lessons Learned and Emergent Best Practice 5.Next steps

5 Intervention Paradigms

6 Intervention Paradigms - Eastern Europe  From early 1990’s intense reform period driven by market transition and for many, goal of EU entry  Early projects focussed on ownership -technical cadastres, restitution, compensation, privatisation support  Importance of land and property in western style market economy became focus  Land Markets paradigm from later 1990’s became well developed and successful intervention tool.  Real estate and related services can contribute large percentage of GDP  By 2015, most countries have well functioning land administration systems  Was this a unique experience or are “land markets” the driver for wider land tenure reform?

7 Land Markets Paradigm Idea was that by kick starting the reform process and creating functioning institutions, the market would then take over and drive the development

8 Intervention Paradigms Drivers today  Emphasis on governance and transparency  Increasingly citizen or investor led  Technologies are now pervasive – social media, open source, cloud based technology, digital imagery,  “fit for purpose” concept largely accepted Policy Level  Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests VGGT (2012)  Principles for Responsible Investment in Agriculture and Food Systems (2014), EITI etc  African Union Land Policy Initiative  G8 Land Transparency, Global Donor Group on Land What is next?

9 1.Introduction 2.Intervention Paradigms 3.Land Tenure issues in Africa 4.Lessons Learned and Emergent Best Practice 5.Next steps

10 Land Tenure Issues in Africa - scale  40% of estimated one billion people live in urban environments (UN Habitat 2010)  Half of population is under 25  >70% do not have secure land tenure / property rights  Population doubled in last 30 years  Population will be 1.9 Billion by 2050 Risk is that in the future the majority will live in urban environments and constitute the urban poor who will be living in marginal areas, townships, and within informal or illegal settlements

11 Land Tenure Issues in Africa - reality  Drivers traditionally: food security, security of title, access to credit (??).  Question of Customary tenure v Individual Title.  Large Titling programmes have focussed on individual rights, but have these then been updated and maintained?  Can be different tenure system in urban and rural  60% of urban dwellers in sub-Saharan Africa live in informal settlements (often with poor infrastructure, sanitation, utilities and located on poor and marginal land)  The institutions responsible for registration, planning, and environmental control are not able to deal with existing problems and so most of the urban properties remain outside of the formal legal system. The urban and rural poor cannot enter the formal land market

12 Land Tenure Issues in Africa – customary v formal Land Rights form a continuum. Recording of formal and informal rights

13 Land Tenure Issues in Africa customary v formal We recognise that Land Rights form a continuum.  removes focus on absolute and individual title Recording of formal and informal rights  Increasing evidence that customary land tenure systems and informal markets are able to support access to land and meet local land occupiers’ needs. For example Incremental tenure improvement approach of Urban LandMark (Napier, et al, 2013) Spatial Units can represent both formal and informal rights  Social Tenure Domain Model (Lemmen, 2010) and LADM  SOLA and Open Tenure (Pullar, 2014)  MapMyRights (McLaren, 2014) We can record or register the informal or customary right, without necessarily converting it to a formal land right

14 Land Tenure Issues in Africa - key issues  Food Security and poverty alleviation. Sub Saharan Africa has a high proportion of land suitable for agriculture, yet has some of the highest poverty rates in the world. 70% of rural population are subsistence farmers.  ‘Rush for land’ and land availability:. The food and agriculture, forestry, extractive industries are increasingly involved in land based investments, financed both publicly and privately, with an estimated 20 million hectares of land transferred to investors since 2000 (Vhyugen)  Weak governance: Weak land governance in many countries is often the result of poor governance structures and affects tenure, economic growth, environmental sustainability and economic growth  Institutional Structures. The roles and responsibilities of the institutions may be overlapping or the responsibilities can be fragmented across many different bodies and can further problems due to decentralisation

15 Land Tenure Issues in Africa - key issues  Implementation of existing land laws and Laws. Laws may exist but are not necessarily implemented  Designation of Village, customary, communal lands. Many are not established and requires considerable effort  Incomplete planning processes at local level. Often capacity limited. Land use plans often seen as a prerequisite to effective land use management and confirmation of land rights  Land that appears to be unutilised is not necessarily land that is available for investment. In some countries, law provides that where land is considered “unused” then the tenure can be changed to a different form and assigned under central authority to an external investor. This may disregard interests of pastoralists etc.

16  Encourage investment, protect communities. Need to be effective ways that local people can collectively or individually work with external investors to mobilise land resources while protecting local interests.  Dispute Resolution. Need local support for dispute resolution (ADR)  Human capacity and decentralised land administration. The sheer scale of a decentralised land administration system can provide significant challenges.  Urban land markets need to be more accessible to the poor. This is a problem also for many middle income countries and how we deal with this will be one of the big challenges of the next century. Land Tenure Issues in Africa - key issues Many of these problems are well known but how to deal with them?

17 1.Introduction 2.Intervention Paradigms 3.Land Tenure issues in Africa 4.Lessons Learned and Emergent Best Practice 5.Next Steps

18 Lessons learned & emergent best practice Lawry, et al (2014) – looked at impact of formal registration of individual rights in Sub-Saharan Africa, compared to Asia and Latin America, found had not had same effect, suggested it was due to  Pre-existing institutions. Do we undermine pre-existing customary systems by advocating formal registration of individual rights?  The wealth effect. Farmers in Africa operate closer to the subsistence level and lack resources for translating tenure rights into commercial production.  Lack of complementary institutions or reforms. Investments in Africa have not been coupled with investments in necessary complementary institutions or infrastructure “public capital” This is supported by the E Europe comparison where there was comprehensive institution building, wealth effect was strongly driven by investment and in most cases institutions were understood and accepted Lesson One: Its not just about land rights

19 Lessons learned & emergent best practice  Community based low cost registration is now possible and can be completed in short periods. — This can be individual titling or customary / informal  Women’s empowerment is significantly advanced through property rights — Property rights influence power perceptions and can change behaviour  “Fit for purpose” is opening up possibility of new tools and techniques that can be used at community level — Image based methods, accuracy of surveys, customary rights, mobile apps, cloud-based solutions Lesson Two: Get the communities involved directly

20 Lessons learned & emergent best practice  Can large scale land investments benefit both local communities and the investor? — Emerging evidence that this ca be done, if designed and set up properly  Enhancing economic growth through land tenure requires wider market interventions. — Registration of land by itself does not create economic growth — Need wider interventions (Lawry) Lesson Three: Need to actively involve private sector

21  Incremental Improvements in land tenure offer an alternative approach for informal settlements Lessons learned & emergent best practice Lesson Four: There may be new non traditional approaches “Informal settlements occupy an important place in the urban land market and play a critical role in urban land access”. Urban LandMark

22 Clear Roadmaps are needed that sets out step by step process for how to improve tenure security and encourage responsible and sustainable investment. These roadmaps need to be holistic in their approach and must use a methodology that is  Accepted by the people  low cost,  robust,  Fit for purpose  Sustainable and can be maintained in the future Lesson Five : Need Clear Plan or RoadMap Lessons learned & emergent best practice

23 1.Introduction 2.Intervention Paradigms 3.Land Tenure issues in Africa 4.Lessons Learned and Emergent Best Practice 5.Next Steps

24 Next steps - where are we now? 1.Commitment. An unprecedented coming together of Governments, Donors, Multilateral institutions, CSO/NGO, the Private Sector and practitioners- G8, VGGT, RIA. 2.Fit for Purpose. The acceptance of the “Fit for Purpose” paradigm and the establishment of national level programmes supporting low cost participatory methods 3.Recognition and acceptance of the continuum of rights paradigm embracing range of rights and the emergence of open source tools for capture and management. 4.Recognition that registration itself is not the end of the project: The land tenure reform is only complete when there is an operational system in place to support land transations 5.Intervention Systems. New intervention models including market based systems approaches that go beyond conventional land administration reform

25 How to create wider approach including involvement of the private sector and mobilisation of communities? Next steps - the future?

26 Thank You

27 The Real Estate Industry  Private Sector services — Real Estate Agents — Valuers — Mortgage Brokers — Banks and Mortgage Providers — Lawyers — Cadastral Surveyors — Information Services and IT  Public Sector services — Cadastre and Land Registry — Physical Planning/ urban & rural management — Local authorities The Real Estate industry involves both private and public sector organisations and businesses.

28 The Real Estate Industry  Private Sector services — Real Estate Agents — Valuers — Mortgage Brokers — Banks and Mortgage Providers — Lawyers — Cadastral Surveyors — Information Services and IT  Public Sector services — Cadastre and Land Registry — Physical Planning/ urban & rural management — Local authorities The Real Estate industry involves both private and public sector organisations and businesses. < 10% 90%+


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