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Issues development related Blog post
There are 2, 367 content items of different types and languages related to development on the Land Portal.
Displaying 37 - 48 of 50

Forging new partnerships: Companies and CSOs collaborate to achieve more responsible investments in land

22 July 2019
Mina Manuchehri

I think the engagement with Illovo is a good start. … [the Project] has provided a platform for Illovo to engage with [us], which is not only a benefit to Illovo, but to the community. It opens up dialogue. In the future…, we’d love for Illovo to come to (us) and ask us to get involved.

We’re creating a ‘gold standard’ for rights – but why?

27 June 2019
Ms. Gabrielle Lipton

In the climate and development arenas, the most current alarm being sounded is for rights –securing the land rights and freedoms of Indigenous peoples, local communities and the marginalized members therein. How can these custodians of a quarter of the world’s terrestrial surface be expected to care for their traditional lands if the lands don’t, in fact, belong to them? Or, worse, if they’re criminalized and endangered for doing so?

Peru’s Indigenous Communities Manage Their Forests. Others Should Follow Their Lead

25 January 2019
Mr. Peter Veit
Marlena Chertock
Katelyn Bredsnajder

Peruvian indigenous communities have shown themselves to be exceptional environmental and conservation leaders. Their leaders have worked for a decade to ensure a government commitment to conserve 54 million hectares of forest, as a part of the REDD+ program.


How do you turn a slum into a suburb? Perhaps data holds a key

17 October 2018
William Cobbett

A revolution is underway. In Latin America, it has likely crested. In Southeast Asia and West Africa, it is moving apace. In East Africa, it is at its most intense.

It is brewing most remarkably not in storied national capitals and megacities, but in the medium sized, second-tier cities, less watched by governments and journalists. Cities that might double in size in 12-15 years, yet already under-resourced.

It is a demographic revolution: significant population growth which drives the epochal growth of city dwelling, as the world becomes ever more urban.

Full Rights for All: USAID Works with the Government of Liberia and its Partners to Address Gender Dimensions in Land Governance

17 April 2018
Dr. Justine N. Uvuza
Izatta Nagbe

Addressing gender disparities in the context of land reforms is not easy. Effectively addressing gender issues takes time and effort, which can sometimes make it more expensive in the initial stages of a project or program. However, evidence shows that integrating gender throughout land reform interventions not only increases benefits for women, but strengthens the intervention overall. Meaningfully including gender into land reform approaches often requires a change in behavior among decision-makers and program participants that, in some cases, may take years, even decades.

Tajikistan’s Path to Prosperity Depends on Creating an Accessible, Equitable Market for Land

17 April 2018
Berkeley Hirsch

Tajikistan is on the cusp of achieving its vision of a fully-functional market that allows land-use rights to be bought and sold. The transition from a post-Soviet system of regulation and control to market-based principles represents the culmination of over a decade of donor-supported commitment and effort to unlock significant economic growth potential in Tajikistan and support the country’s transition away from donor assistance.


What is counted will count: why getting SDG land indicators to Tier I matters

05 January 2018
Mr. Chris Penrose Buckley

There’s been quite a hubbub in the land community the last month over the reclassification of two land indicators from ‘Tier III’ to ‘Tier II’. So what’s this all about? For the uninitiated, each SDG indicator has to go through a validation process before it gets included in the formal SDG reporting process that will run from 2020 to 2030.

Natural disasters are in 3D – and the rights that protect against them should be as well

02 January 2018
Luis Triveno
Mr. Tim Hanstad

The recent series of devastating hurricanes in the Caribbean has reminded the world, once again, that natural disasters are not equal-opportunity destroyers. The economically marginalized and those lacking secure land and property rights are often disproportionately affected for at least three reasons: