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Showing items 1 through 9 of 153.
  1. Library Resource
    Conference Papers & Reports
    November, 1970
    Ethiopia

    Of the nation's 122.2 million hectares of total area, 84.1 million hectares of land and 12.1 million hectares of water and water courses comprise the potentially productive cultivable land and water resources of the nation. At present, only 10.4 per cent of the total land area i.e. 12.9 million hectares is put under cultivation of which 9 to 91/2 million hectares have actually "been planted and harvested. Agriculture, the dominant sector of the country's economy is not only a goldmine in terms of potential but also a real source of wealth.

  2. Library Resource
    Conference Papers & Reports
    December, 1970
    Ethiopia

    L’Ethiopie dispose d’un potentiel agricole considérable, il existe plusieurs obstacles fondamentaux sur la voie des l’exploitation de ce potentiel.

  3. Library Resource
    Conference Papers & Reports
    November, 1970
    Africa

    The introduction of registration of title is certainly in our present state of knowledge the best method of remedying the uncertainty of customary land law. The advantages of^registration of title both to private landowners and to Governments and its superiority over other systems of recording rights in land,i.e. private registration of deeds., are discussed in paper given in this Seminar and I will not elaborate them here.

  4. Library Resource
    Conference Papers & Reports
    November, 1970
    Ghana

    The original and primary owners of lands in. Ghana are the stools or skins. Families and individuals do own lands, the original titles to which are derived from stools or skins- Before 1957, all lands of what was called the Northern Territories were held in trust for the chiefs of the Northern Territories try the Governor whilst Ashanti lands, having being occupied as a result of conquest, were British Crown lands.

  5. Library Resource
    Conference Papers & Reports
    October, 1970
    Africa

    The discoveries of science and new technologies it has not yet always proved possible to do so. therefore continue to use resources, which might otherwise be put to more productive purposes, -on curing those who contract these diseases and in trying to prevents or at least minimize the chances of, their recurrence. The conditions known as 'fragmentation' and 'multiple ownership when the Reach severe, proportions can fairly be described; as diseases of land tenure".

  6. Library Resource
    Conference Papers & Reports
    September, 1970
    Morocco

    The system of registration "based on the above principles has the following characteristics: Each accurately delimited property is inscribed in a land register under a. name and number and with topographical and legal data which show clearly and accurately the right of its owner. The real right of charges^ transfers of ownership and changes concerning a property are indicated in the land registers which constitute in short, the complete and detailed record of each registered property.

  7. Library Resource
    Conference Papers & Reports
    November, 1970
    Africa

    Man instinctively and intelligently takes care of himself as well as he can, and man does this test in a society of fellow humans. The natural human priority is self-preservation and fulfillment, but in the framework of the human group- where responsibilities to others give meaning to rights that each individual asserts for himself and can test us as individualst even as it sustains us- Land can unify

    and ennoble us as groups, even as it tempts us to indulge the more provincial among social concerns.

  8. Library Resource
    Reports & Research
    September, 1970
    Morocco

    Le régime de l'immatriculation foncière repose sur le printsipe de la

    publicité réelle et par conséquent individualise chaque propriété en la de terminant physiquement et juridiquement.

  9. Library Resource
    Conference Papers & Reports
    November, 1970
    Africa

    L'immatriculation est un système superieur aux deux autres, pour la principale raison que l'enregistrement est fondé non pas sur les documents ni sur les être humains qui sont appels à changer de place et sont sujets à des erreurs d'identité, mails sur les parcelles de terre qui sont immuables, indestructibles et que l'on peut définir avec précision.

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