This article examines the evolution of policy recommendations concerning rural land issues since the formulation of the World Bank's "Land Reform Policy Paper" in 1975. That paper set out three guiding principles: the desirability of owner-operated family farms; the need for markets to permit land to be transferred to more productive users; and the importance of an egalitarian asset distribution. In the 25 years since that paper was published, these guiding principles have remained the same, but it is now recognized that communal tenure systems can be more cost-effective than formal title, that titling programs should be judged on their equity as well as their efficiency, that the potential of land rental markets has often been severely und...
This is a post-print of an article published in Land Use Policy 2006 published by Elsevier. This ve...
This is a paper from the International Conference on Land Tenure in the Developing World 1998. http:...
“Civilized living in market economies is not simply due to greater prosperity but to the order that ...
This article examines the evolution of policy recommendations concerning rural land issues since the...
Abstract: This paper focuses on the broad conclusions from recent research on land issues It argues ...
Recent literature on land tenure suggests that tenancy can be an efficient contractual arrangement a...
Since independence, landholdings in Southern Africa have remained highly skewed between the rich and...
Land reforms fell out of favour with donors from the early 1970s—nonetheless, sporadic efforts to re...
Note: This volume includes "Economic Theory of Land Markets and Its Implications for the Land Acces...
Land market reform is re-emerging as one of the most important instruments of development policy to ...
Since the early 1980s land administration system projects have revolved around delivering and formal...
(Excerpt) This Article begins the project of constructing a unified account of land reform. This mod...
A large body of research recognizes the importance of institutions providing land owners with secure...
Well-functioning land markets can, in prin-ciple, contribute to broad-based rural de-velopment in se...
Land reform – the reallocation of rights to establish a more equitable distribution of farmland – ca...
This is a post-print of an article published in Land Use Policy 2006 published by Elsevier. This ve...
This is a paper from the International Conference on Land Tenure in the Developing World 1998. http:...
“Civilized living in market economies is not simply due to greater prosperity but to the order that ...
This article examines the evolution of policy recommendations concerning rural land issues since the...
Abstract: This paper focuses on the broad conclusions from recent research on land issues It argues ...
Recent literature on land tenure suggests that tenancy can be an efficient contractual arrangement a...
Since independence, landholdings in Southern Africa have remained highly skewed between the rich and...
Land reforms fell out of favour with donors from the early 1970s—nonetheless, sporadic efforts to re...
Note: This volume includes "Economic Theory of Land Markets and Its Implications for the Land Acces...
Land market reform is re-emerging as one of the most important instruments of development policy to ...
Since the early 1980s land administration system projects have revolved around delivering and formal...
(Excerpt) This Article begins the project of constructing a unified account of land reform. This mod...
A large body of research recognizes the importance of institutions providing land owners with secure...
Well-functioning land markets can, in prin-ciple, contribute to broad-based rural de-velopment in se...
Land reform – the reallocation of rights to establish a more equitable distribution of farmland – ca...
This is a post-print of an article published in Land Use Policy 2006 published by Elsevier. This ve...
This is a paper from the International Conference on Land Tenure in the Developing World 1998. http:...
“Civilized living in market economies is not simply due to greater prosperity but to the order that ...