One Billion Rising. Law, Land and the Alleviation of Global Poverty
Author(s)
Hanstad, Tim
Mitchell, Robert
L. Prosterman, Roy
Language
EnglishAbstract
Most of the world's estimated 1.4 billion poorest people are still rural. Yet the majority lack ownership (or any secure rights) to the land that is their principal source of livelihood. Although land law and related reforms have transformed the lives of millions of families by providing secure land rights, not all such efforts have succeeded. Over the years, the conventional wisdom concerning law and land tenure reform-what is needed, what is possible, and how such reform contributes to pro-poor development-has changed, sometimes in striking ways. Lawyers at the Rural Development Institute and the University of Washington School of Law in Seattle have spent more than four decades advising on, helping formulate and assessing the results of land tenure reform efforts around the world. The present volume distills key lessons from that work and parallel work by others.
Keywords
law; land tenure; sociology; China; India; Land law; Land reform; Legal aidDOI
10.24415/9789087280642Publisher
Leiden University PressPublisher website
https://www.lup.nl/Publication date and place
2009Series
Law, Governance, and Development,Classification
Law and society, sociology of law