Fit-for-Purpose Land Administration in Violent Conflict Settings
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review and Definitions
3. Research Methodology and Methods
FFP LA as Part of Larger UN Programs
Country | UN Entity | Conflicting Parties | Internally Displaced Persons/Conflicts | Approach |
---|---|---|---|---|
Darfur/Sudan | UN-African Union Hybrid Operation in Darfur (UNAMID)-peacekeeping mission | Host community Internally Displaced People (IDP) | 2.6 million | Good offices agreements for access to land, technical assistance |
UN-Habitat | ||||
Democratic Republic of Congo (DR Congo) | UN Organization Stabilization mission in the DR Congo (MONUSCO)-peacekeeping mission | Big farmers | 4.49 million; Masisi territory case study 4600 | Good offices, human rights, protection of civilians |
Customary owners | ||||
Honduras | UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) | Criminal gangs | 174,000 20 urban municipalities (2004–2014) | Documenting forcibly abandoned houses |
Displaced | ||||
people | ||||
Iraq | UN-Habitat | Different ethnic/religious groups | 3.3 million; 250,000 Yazidi from case study | Land certificates, GIS, house rehabilitation |
Peru | UN Development Program (UNDP) | Extractive industry indigenous people | 200 conflicts a year (2006–2016), 70% linked to extractives | Territorial development agreement |
Somalia | UN-Habitat | Pastoralists, farmers, urban residents, owners and occupants | 1.1 million for the whole of Somalia; at least 44,000 for case study area | Land policy process, LA recommendations |
South Sudan | UN Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS)-peacekeeping mission | Cattle owners, farmers, cross border | 1.94 million South Sudan; 250,406 IDP Upper Nile case study | Territorial agreement |
4. Findings
4.1. Building on Land Administration Frameworks
4.2. Building on Fit-for-Purpose Land Administration Frameworks
- Incremental building on existing capacity and legal frameworks. Focusing on adjusting regulations as much as possible as new laws can take years.
- Rapid identification and use of government-owned land for rapid delivery of security of tenure to returnees.
- Reducing planning standards and undertaking one stop planning for rapid planning approvals. This is vital for upgrading informal settlements and IDP camps.
- Reducing surveying and registration requirements. This includes allocating unplanned non-surveyed land, called Grade IV in the state-level statutory system, thereby excluding the final registration step in the Judiciary at national level. Using group areas instead of individual plots. For example, the allocation by customary authorities of land for villages for returnees can be registered as a community based right (Plot 1), where instead only the outside boundary of the village is registered.
- Legalizing the customary land management system.
- Delivering serviced land rapidly in urban areas by increasing the amount of serviced land by minimizing the time taken to deliver the services, while ensuring minimum standards.
- Improving information management to track large-scale returns and developing strategic plans for the overall management of returns, including through regional planning, land management and for conflict analysis.
- Identifying a range of dispute resolution mechanisms based on the assessment of possible return areas and conflict hot spots, and the tenure and land document types found in these areas. Using land-dispute resolution tools such as mediation, territory-wide land use agreements, and dispute resolution at the plot and territory levels [13] (pp. 9, 19, 30, 52–55, 79–84).
4.3. Building on Post Conflict Land Administration Approaches
4.4. Land Governance and the UN in Violent Conflict Contexts
- The targeted clarifying and coordinating of LAS government functions across national, state and local levels for a specific humanitarian purpose such as voluntary returns.
- Amending regulations rather than developing new laws.
- Ensuring due diligence and minimum standards to protect people and their land rights.
- By using land information management, tracking trends of people returning to their areas of origin or other areas, conflict and dispute resolution patterns, and to identify areas that need additional land-related peace-building interventions. This also requires early warning systems at the community level and along migratory routes.
- Strengthening the Land Commission to “perform its function and mandate to arbitrate between willing contending parties on land claims, (and) assess appropriate land compensation” [13] (pp. 82–85).
- Ensuring the processes for addressing housing, land and property challenges in a humanitarian setting do not discriminate against women [9] (p. 70).
- Supporting women’s access to land and tenure security across the full range of tenure types and the identification of the most viable tenure options that can reach the greatest number of women in the shortest time [13] (pp. 68, 73), as well as support to their access to justice mechanisms [9] (p. 70).
- Providing special provisions for women, particularly widows and women-headed families of returnees, in customary areas where their legal status needs to be protected. Women-headed households and widows should be considered as heads of households in the customary system with a right to access land [13] (pp. 75, 79, 84). This may also involve support for the provision of civil documentation [9] (p. 70).
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Augustinus, C.; Tempra, O. Fit-for-Purpose Land Administration in Violent Conflict Settings. Land 2021, 10, 139. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10020139
Augustinus C, Tempra O. Fit-for-Purpose Land Administration in Violent Conflict Settings. Land. 2021; 10(2):139. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10020139
Chicago/Turabian StyleAugustinus, Clarissa, and Ombretta Tempra. 2021. "Fit-for-Purpose Land Administration in Violent Conflict Settings" Land 10, no. 2: 139. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10020139
APA StyleAugustinus, C., & Tempra, O. (2021). Fit-for-Purpose Land Administration in Violent Conflict Settings. Land, 10(2), 139. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10020139