Joint WB/FIG/GLTN/FAO publication 
	   
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        Innovations in Land Rights Recognition, Administration and 
			Governance
		
		The World Bank has published a joint 
			WB/FIG/GLTN/FAO publication on “Innovations in Land Rights 
			Recognition, Administration and Governance”. This publication is 
			based on papers presented mainly at the joint FIG/WB conference on  
			“Land Governance in Support of the Millennium Development Goals: 
			Responding to New Challenges” that was held in Washington DC, USA 
			9-10 March 2009. 
			
				
      			Joint WB/FIG/GLTN/FAO publication on Innovations in Land 
				Rights Recognition, Administration and Governance. Joint 
				Discussion Paper published by The World Bank, GLTN, FIG and FAO. 
				Edited by Klaus Deininger, Stig Enemark, Clarissa Augustinus and 
				Paul Munro-Faure. Proceedings from the Annual Conference on Land 
				Policy and Administration.
      Joint Organizational Discussion Paper—Issue 2. April 2010.
				Download here
			
			The importance of good land governance to strengthen women’s land 
		rights, facilitate land-related investment, transfer land to better 
		uses, use it as collateral, and allow effective decentralization through 
		collection of property taxes has long been recognized. The challenges 
		posed by recent global developments, especially urbanization, increased 
		and more volatile food prices, and climate change have raised the 
		profile of land and the need for countries to have appropriate land 
		policies. However, efforts to improve country-level land governance are 
		often frustrated by technical complexities, institutional fragmentation, 
		vested interests, and lack of a shared vision on how to move towards 
		good land governance and measure progress in concrete settings. Recent 
		initiatives have recognized the important challenges this raises and the 
		need for partners to act in a collaborative and coordinated fashion to 
		address them. The breadth and depth of the papers included in this 
		volume, all of which were presented at the World Bank’s Annual 
		Conference on Land Policy and Administration, illustrate the benefits 
		from such collaboration. They are indicative not only of the diversity 
		of issues related to land governance but, more importantly, highlight 
		that, even though the topic is complex and politically challenging, 
		there is a wealth of promising new approaches to improving land 
		governance through innovative technologies, country-wide policy 
		dialogue, and legal and administrative reforms. The publication is based 
		on an on-going partnership between the World Bank, the International 
		Federation of Surveyors, the Global Land Tool Network and the United 
		Nations Food and Agriculture Organization provide tools that can help to 
		address land governance in practice and at scale. It is our hope that 
		this volume will be of use to increase awareness of and support to the 
		successful implementation of innovative approaches that can help to not 
		only improve land governance, but also thereby contribute to the 
		well-being of the poorest and the achievement of the Millennium 
		Development Goals.