This paper analyzes whether national laws acknowledge indigenous peoples and other rural communities in 100 countries as owners of waters that arise within their lands. Results derive from information collected by LandMark to score the legal status of community land tenure. Findings are positive; half of all countries recognize communities as lawful possessors of water on their lands. Three quarters permit communities to manage the distribution and use of water on their lands. While 71 percent of countries declare water to be a public resource, this belies the substantial existence of privately owned water. In 29 percent of countries, private water is an identified legal category, and in many other countries obtainable rights to water are s...
Water is absent in the ‘Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisher...
This chapter examines water law in a global South-global North context. It looks at the recent evolu...
Development of individually-held reservation lands for agriculture, mining, or commerce almost alway...
This paper analyzes whether national laws acknowledge indigenous peoples and other rural communities...
This paper analyzes whether national laws acknowledge indigenous peoples and other rural communities...
A critical legal issue in water governance is who owns and who holds property rights in water. Hence...
Living customary water tenure is the most accepted socio-legal system among the large majority of ru...
Despite the progress made in conceptualizing and advocating for secure community-based land and fore...
Indigenous communities around the globe, totalling about 370 million people, are faced with the chal...
In this article, Dean Getches examines the nature of international law as it relates to indigenous w...
The United States and other common law countries have a rich tradition of protecting property rights...
Statutory recognition of rural communities as collective owners of their lands is substantial, expan...
Majority of the indigenous people in Papua New Guinea (about 87 per cent) live on their customary la...
AbstractWhile the role of secure property rights contributing to sustainable natural resource manage...
Executive SummaryNAILSMA ­ TRaCK PROJECT 6.2 INDIGENOUS RIGHTS IN WATER IN NORTHERN AUSTRALIAMaj...
Water is absent in the ‘Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisher...
This chapter examines water law in a global South-global North context. It looks at the recent evolu...
Development of individually-held reservation lands for agriculture, mining, or commerce almost alway...
This paper analyzes whether national laws acknowledge indigenous peoples and other rural communities...
This paper analyzes whether national laws acknowledge indigenous peoples and other rural communities...
A critical legal issue in water governance is who owns and who holds property rights in water. Hence...
Living customary water tenure is the most accepted socio-legal system among the large majority of ru...
Despite the progress made in conceptualizing and advocating for secure community-based land and fore...
Indigenous communities around the globe, totalling about 370 million people, are faced with the chal...
In this article, Dean Getches examines the nature of international law as it relates to indigenous w...
The United States and other common law countries have a rich tradition of protecting property rights...
Statutory recognition of rural communities as collective owners of their lands is substantial, expan...
Majority of the indigenous people in Papua New Guinea (about 87 per cent) live on their customary la...
AbstractWhile the role of secure property rights contributing to sustainable natural resource manage...
Executive SummaryNAILSMA ­ TRaCK PROJECT 6.2 INDIGENOUS RIGHTS IN WATER IN NORTHERN AUSTRALIAMaj...
Water is absent in the ‘Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisher...
This chapter examines water law in a global South-global North context. It looks at the recent evolu...
Development of individually-held reservation lands for agriculture, mining, or commerce almost alway...