Internationally there is a large and growing body of scholarly literature that describes problems of land access and discusses the 'exclusion' of people, often indigenous people, from landscapes. Exclusion connotes the removal of access of people from landscapes and the process by which this occurs; the interactions between legality (often termed regulation), force as acts of violence or threats of violence, the market and legitimation.[1] Regulation (termed legality in this paper) is associated with legal and state instrumentality and is the 'rules regarding access to land and conditions of use.'[2] The market is linked to commodification, the creation of incentives and pressure to individualise land tenure arrangements so as to make land ...
In the plural legal systems of the South Pacific island nations, there is an ongoing struggle to har...
Customary Land is vital to economic development. But attempts to access customary land through state...
This book is © 2011 by the University of Hawaii Press and can be purchased on the publisher's websit...
One of the many post-colonial claims of indigenous people is the re-assertion of their rights over t...
Although most land in Vanuatu is held under customary land tenure and governed therefore by unwritte...
"This paper has sought to highlight serious inequities that derive from the interaction of the forma...
In a country such as Vanuatu, where land is owned by the indigenous custom owners and the Constituti...
This paper examines how the new material value of land in postcolonial Vanuatu intensifies people's ...
MA University of Hawaii at Manoa 2004Includes bibliographical references (leaves 118–122).This thesi...
Although the pluralist system of land tenure in Vanuatu does not directly discriminate against women...
This article explores a primary source of legal studies, case-law, as a form of narrative in the con...
Among the least developed nations in the world, Vanuatu had the dubious distinction of being governe...
Being fully aware of what was at stake and of the importance of land for its citizens, Vanuatu had a...
This article explores a primary source of legal studies, case-law, as a form of narrative in the con...
In the plural legal systems of the South Pacific island nations, there is an ongoing struggle to har...
In the plural legal systems of the South Pacific island nations, there is an ongoing struggle to har...
Customary Land is vital to economic development. But attempts to access customary land through state...
This book is © 2011 by the University of Hawaii Press and can be purchased on the publisher's websit...
One of the many post-colonial claims of indigenous people is the re-assertion of their rights over t...
Although most land in Vanuatu is held under customary land tenure and governed therefore by unwritte...
"This paper has sought to highlight serious inequities that derive from the interaction of the forma...
In a country such as Vanuatu, where land is owned by the indigenous custom owners and the Constituti...
This paper examines how the new material value of land in postcolonial Vanuatu intensifies people's ...
MA University of Hawaii at Manoa 2004Includes bibliographical references (leaves 118–122).This thesi...
Although the pluralist system of land tenure in Vanuatu does not directly discriminate against women...
This article explores a primary source of legal studies, case-law, as a form of narrative in the con...
Among the least developed nations in the world, Vanuatu had the dubious distinction of being governe...
Being fully aware of what was at stake and of the importance of land for its citizens, Vanuatu had a...
This article explores a primary source of legal studies, case-law, as a form of narrative in the con...
In the plural legal systems of the South Pacific island nations, there is an ongoing struggle to har...
In the plural legal systems of the South Pacific island nations, there is an ongoing struggle to har...
Customary Land is vital to economic development. But attempts to access customary land through state...
This book is © 2011 by the University of Hawaii Press and can be purchased on the publisher's websit...