Land Reform Revisited
Full citation: HAKI Network, "Land Reform Revisited," HAKI NETWORK REPORT (2013).
- Collection Type:
- Articles
- Country:
- Multiple Countries, South Korea, Taiwan, Japan, El Salvador, Bolivia, Peru
- Creator:
- HAKI Network
- Year:
- 2013
Full citation: HAKI Network, "Land Reform Revisited," HAKI NETWORK REPORT (2013).
Synthesizes findings and best practices from six case studies that assess approaches for community land and ensure both women and men benefit from the improved land tenure security.
One of six case studies informing the synthesis report "Gender and Collectively Held Land: Good Practices and Lessons Learned from Six Global Case Studies."
Synthesis Report Based on Findings from Three Global Case Studies; Côte d’Ivoire, Papua New Guinea, and Peru.
One of three Women, Land, and Mining Case Studies. These individual case studies, summarized together in a separate synthesis report, represent diverse geographies, different scales of mining, different political and cultural contexts, differing project funding sources, a range of stages in the mining lifecycle, and diverse project approaches. They each contain more detail than the overarching synthesis report.
Information brief
CIFOR Infobrief no. 238
Full citation: Deininger, K., Selod, H. and Burns, A., THE LAND GOVERNANCE ASSESSMENT FRAMEWORK - IDENTIFYING AND MONITORING GOOD PRACTICES IN THE LAND SECTOR (World Bank 2011).
Spanish name: Ley de Comunidades Campesinas Deslinde y Titulación de Territorios Comunales
Spanish name: Resolución Comunidades Nativas
Spanish name: Ley des Derecho a la Consulta a Los Pueblos Indígenas
Spanish name: Ley de desarollo y fortalecimiento de organizaciones agrarias
Spanish name: Ley General de Comunidades Campesinas
Spanish Name: Ley del Resitro de Predios Rurales
Full citation: Field, E. (2007). "Entitled to Work: Urban Property Rights and Labor Supply in Peru." Quarterly Journal of Economics 122 (4): 1561-602. - Receipt of legal documents (land titles) allowed former squatters, especially women, to join formal labor markets instead of staying at home to guard their land, thereby increasing their income and reducing child labor.
[Threats to Women’s Land Tenure Security and Effectiveness of Interventions - Annotated Bibliography]