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Issues legal empowerment related Blog post
There are 607 content items of different types and languages related to legal empowerment on the Land Portal.
Displaying 37 - 48 of 48

Land Rights Are the Invisible Investment Risk Too Many Ignore

28 August 2018
Laura Notess
Mr. Peter Veit

Land conflicts can be fatal for burgeoning agribusiness or other enterprises located in rural regions, but many companies have limited knowledge of how to anticipate and evaluate land-related risk. This is particularly true for land held under collective arrangements by Indigenous peoples or other communities, which is seldom formally documented.


 


Vacant Land, or Invisible Risk?


Chicoco Collective Human City Project

13 August 2018
Michael Uwemedimo

OUR CITY: WHY WE WORK WHERE WE WORK

‘Chicoco’ means mud, the black, fibrous mud that people living in Port Harcourt’s waterfront communities cut from the mangroves and throw down on the river’s edge to reclaim land from the creeks. They build their homes on this mud.

‘MANY VOICES MAKE A CITY. SOME PEOPLE ARE TRYING TO TEAR THE CITY DOWN. BUT WE ARE CITY BUILDERS AND THIS IS OUR RHYTHM, OUR RIGHT, OUR VOICE.’

Land is the maker and the marker of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

06 July 2018
Frits van der Wal

Land is the maker and the marker of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).  For the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA), our aim is to contribute squarely to relevant land-related results where solutions exist and actions are needed, which is at subnational or national levels in countries. We work with national and local governments as well as with other locally mandated actors that in most cases get assistance from international organisations .

Podcast: Can Legal Empowerment Change Power Dynamics?

17 May 2018

Access to justice is a key governance concern in developed and developing countries alike. Community legal workers aim to help poor or comparatively powerless people defend themselves against land grabs, obtain public services, and challenge corruption. Can this bottom-up approach counter powerful interests seeking to entrench their control? Can legal empowerment help respond to rising authoritarianism and repression of civil society?

Dispossession still threatens Barbudans as they battle to maintain the island as their property

Five weeks ago ‘A land rights storm brewing in Barbuda’ was reprinted on this portal. This told the sorry tale of the Prime Minister of Antigua & Barbuda using the catastrophic damage wrecked on the island by Hurricane Irma as the excuse to get rid of the collective ownership of Barbudans of their island once and for all.

5 Lessons Learned From Applying a Legal Empowerment Approach to Community Land Protection in Sierra Leone

The Namati team in Sierra Leone is engaged in an ongoing effort to discover sustainable measures for community ownership, management, and administration of land and natural resources throughout the country. To this end, we have taken on a new project: the application of a legal empowerment approach to community land protection.

 

A paralegal approach to negotiating large-scale land deals in Sierra Leone

By Sonkita Conteh, Director, Sierra Leone Program, Namati

 

Three years ago I wrote about how communities in Sierra Leone were getting the short end of the stick in large-scale land transactions. Many did not understand the provisions of the complex lease agreements they were signing. Not only are these leases legally complicated, they are sometimes signed under pressure and are not always translated into a community’s local language. 

Land grabs and the International Criminal Court: will Cambodia’s kleptocrats finally face justice?

On 15th September the International Criminal Court broadened its process for selecting and prioritising cases to include land grabbing and environmental destruction. The decision presents an opportunity to curb the deforestation and rights abuses driven by illegally-issued agricultural concessions in Cambodia, likely to be the court’s first credible case. It also has important implications for other countries suffering from the worst excesses of illegal deforestation. Neil Loughlin and Tom Johnson report.