Article of the Month -
November 2009
|
Trends in Land Administration and
Management with Particular Reference to World Bank Support for Projects
in the East Asia Region
Keith Clifford BELL, The World Bank, East Asia Pacific Region,
United States of America
This article in .pdf-format (22
pages and 143 KB)
1) This paper has been presented at the 7th FIG
Regional Conference in Hanoi, Vietnam, 19-22 October 2009 and offers an
interesting view to one of the key themes of the conference.
Key words: good governance, land acquisition, land administration,
land development, land management, land policy, land reform, Millennium
Development Goals, tenure security, transparency
SUMMARY
In any country, reform of land administration and management is a
major investment of capital and human resources and requires strong and
consistent leadership in order to achieve effective, sustainable
outcomes. Such reforms require long-term commitment. Land and property
are generally the major assets in any economy, and can often account for
between half to three-quarters of national wealth. Land is a fundamental
factor for agriculture production and is thus directly linked to food
security. Land is one of the main sources of collateral, used to obtain
credit from established financial institutions such as banks, as well as
from informal providers of credit.
The Millennium Development Goals (MDG) commit the international
community to an expanded vision for development, one that vigorously
promotes human development as the key to sustaining social and economic
progress in all countries, and recognizes the importance of creating a
global partnership for development. The goals have been commonly
accepted as a framework for measuring development progress. The MDG
constructively challenges the entire global community. On the one hand,
the MDG challenge poor countries to demonstrate good governance and
commitment to poverty reduction. On the other hand, the MDG also
challenge the more wealthy countries to maintain their commitment to
support economic and social development. With the ever increasing
concerns such as poverty alleviation, food security, disasters,
international investment in land concessions, climate change,
responsible sustainable development, human rights, social justice, good
governance and conflict, the relevance of the land sector to achieving
the MDG remains highly relevant and extremely challenging.
In the East Asia Region, the World Bank, in collaboration with other
development partners, have assisted, or are continuing to fund land
administration projects in Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines, China,
Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam. The Bank’s program of ”lending” projects
have had varying degrees of emphasis on social equity and stability,
economic and fiscal growth, environmental responsibility and sustainable
development. In post-conflict countries, tenure security and access to
land are major factor in providing long-term stability, whereas
development of land markets are seen as generating durable results.
Complementing the Bank’s program of funded projects, the Bank also
undertakes a wide ranging program of analytical studies or economic and
sector work (ESW) to support policy development and knowledge-building
both within countries, across the region and globally. In particular at
this time, significant ESW programs is addressing critical policy issues
such as land acquisition and land concessions, good governance, gender
mainstreaming.
This paper discusses the World Bank land administration portfolio
across the East Asia Region and in particular the range of contemporary
issues being addressed including: governance; access to land for
development concessions along with the related issues regarding
compulsory land acquisition, valuation and compensation; gender
mainstreaming; institutional and policy reforms; focused capacity
building; and the utilization of information and communications
technology (ICT).
1. INTRODUCTION
Land continues to be a cause of social, ethnic, cultural and
religious conflict. For many centuries, many wars and revolutions have
been fought over rights to land. Throughout history, virtually all
civilizations have devoted considerable efforts to defining rights to
land and in establishing institutions to administer these rights, i.e.
land administration systems. Land and property are generally the major
assets in any economy, wherein, land may account for between half to
three-quarters of national wealth. Land is a fundamental factor for
agricultural production and is thus directly linked to food security.
Security of land tenure is an important foundation for economic
development, social stability, environmental management, and also for
supporting reconstruction following a disaster or conflict.
Therefore, it is not surprising that the importance of supporting the
land sector is a consistent key message from the respective World
Development Reports (WDR) for 2008, 2009 and 2010, which advocate for
stepped up support for land policies and institutions. The growing
challenges of food security and climate change have especially given
prominence to land. The Bank has advocated in various regions the need
to accelerate the scaling up of assistance for land activities,
especially improved documentation and protection of the land rights of
local communities and landholders as part of a strategy to manage risks
associated with the upsurge in direct foreign investment in agriculture
and agricultural land.
The World Bank, with the support of development partners and civil
society organizations (CSO), are continuing to support the
implementation of land projects throughout the world. From the World
Bank side, specific support to the land sector has been provided for the
past three decades. Some other international development agencies have
been providing support to this sector for even longer. These projects
have varying degrees of emphasis on social equity and economic
development. In post-conflict countries, tenure security and access to
land are major factors in providing long-term stability. Reform is often
inhibited or even undermined by poor governance. Good land
administration is often as much related to land administration issues as
it is to the quality of the civil service, especially its transparency
and accountability.
There are many complexities, dimensions and themes associated with
land administration. Securing land rights is particularly relevant to
vulnerable groups such as the poor, women, orphans, displaced persons
and ethnic minority groups. Fees and taxes on land are often a
significant source of government revenue, particularly at the local
level, and often underpin the sustainability of decentralization. In
most societies, there are many competing demands on land including
development, agriculture, pasture, forestry, industry, infrastructure,
urbanization, biodiversity, customary rights, ecological and
environmental protection. Most countries have great difficulty in
balancing the needs of these competing demands. Reform of land
administration in any country is a long-term prospect requiring decades
of sustained commitment. It is a major investment of capital and human
resources and requires strong, consistent, transparent and accountable
leadership, in order to achieve effective, sustainable outcomes. Dealing
with each and every one of these can contribute to achieving the
challenges of the Millennium Development Goals (MDG).
2. THE MILLENIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
The MDG commit the international community to an expanded vision for
development, one that vigorously promotes human development as the key
to sustaining social and economic progress in all countries, and
recognizes the importance of creating a global partnership for
development. The goals have been commonly accepted as a framework for
measuring development progress. The MDG constructively challenges the
entire global community. On the one hand, the MDG challenge poor
countries to demonstrate good governance and commitment to poverty
reduction. On the other hand the MDG also challenge the more wealthy
countries to maintain their commitment to support economic and social
development (World Bank 2002).
The eight MDG are:
- Goal 1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
- Goal 2. Achieve universal primary education
- Goal 3 Promote gender equality and empower women
- Goal 4 Reduce child mortality
- Goal 5 Improve maternal health
- Goal 6 Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases
- Goal 7 Ensure environmental sustainability
- Goal 8 Develop a global partnership for development.
To monitor progress with the implementation of the MDG, there are 18
output targets and 48 key performance indicators. World Bank support for
land reform projects is directly aligned to the MDGs, and especially
with MDGs 1, 3, 7 and 8. Issues such as poverty reduction, tenure
security, pro-poor land management, good governance, environmental
sustainability, gender equality, the rights of vulnerable groups in
society, exploitation of information communication technologies (ICT)
are all key issues for land administration and management programs.
3. OVERVIEW OF WORLD BANK SUPPORT FOR LAND ADMINISTRATION AND
MANAGEMENT PROJECTS
3.1. Background to Support
Of all the development sectors supported by the World Bank, land is
amongst the most challenging, complex and controversial. However, it is
also one of the most fundamental sectors, with land issues underpinning
multiple other sectors including agriculture, water, mining, energy,
infrastructure, housing, transportation and climate. Land issues are
deeply rooted in countries’ histories and cultures. At the most extreme,
land issues have been identified as cause of civil and international
wars, and even genocide. Furthermore, land issues are often highly
politically sensitive, implying that attempts to address them need to be
solidly grounded in empirical research, often building on carefully
evaluated pilots. The risk matrix for all land-related interventions is
indeed high, and such risks run far more deeply than reputational risks
to donor institutions, as the lives and the livelihoods of individuals
is very much affected.
The World Bank has been directly engaged in supporting the land
sector for more than thirty years. This work can be broadly divided into
four key areas: (a) support for policy development, (b) analytical and
advisory (AAA) research or economic and sector work (ESW); (c)
investment lending to support development and reconstruction; and (d)
technical assistance. The Bank’s strong analytical capacity and
intellectual leadership have allowed its activities to draw on cutting
edge research to show the importance of land issues for overall economic
development and to help countries formulate and build consensus around
national strategies to deal with land in a prioritized and
well-sequenced manner. In some cases demand for the Bank’s analytical
work has been equal to or greater than that for Bank lending for land
projects. Strong links to academic and civil society institutions in
client countries and with development partners, continue to allow the
Bank to translate analytical inputs into effective solutions to support
development and reconstruction.
For many stakeholders, the support for land administration provided
by the World Bank, through funding, analytical support and technical
advice, is often misconstrued by stakeholders that the World Bank is
actually “implementing projects”. Nothing could be further from the
truth. The World Bank does not implement projects. It provides support
for the aid-recipient countries themselves, to implement projects in
accordance with the laws and policies of the respective countries.
However, the World Bank works with the recipient country to establish an
agreed project design and there are conditions set for the provision of
support, which are laid down in the contracts for financing of Grants,
Credits and Loans. These conditions generally require compliance with
the World Bank’s policies and guidelines for safeguards, procurement and
financial management.
3.2. Focus of Land Administration Projects in East Asia
Table 1 presents a much generalized history of the scope of land
administration and management projects over the past three decades of
World Bank support. It should be noted that this history has largely
been in response to lessons learned in earlier projects, changes in
technology and the political, social and economic priorities of
government policy setting and donor engagement. Some of the notable
impacts, in the East Asia Region, especially economic and
socio-political drivers in East Asia, have included: (a) the Asian
economic meltdown of 1997; (b) democratization in Indonesia
post-Suharto; (c) post-conflict Cambodia; (d) Thailand’s economic
development progress and political changes; (e) Laos post-socialism; (f)
the tsunami impacts on Indonesia’s Aceh province; and (g) rapid land
market investment growth in Vietnam. The earlier World Bank supported
land projects, tended to almost singularly focus on land titling to
provide first time registration. Together with these issues, the land
sector now is now recognized as having much cross-sectoral impacts. The
challenges are now much greater and complex.
The initial World Bank supported projects, commencing in the early
1980s were primarily focused on first time registration of property
rights. For example, the early Thailand Land Titling Projects have
generally been regarded as best practice for achieving first time
registration in a developing country. For these early projects, only
limited support was provided to legal or institutional reforms, largely
due to the adequacy of already established arrangements.
Over the next 25 or more years, the scope of projects has continued
to expand, to embrace a broader range of land-related issues and to take
advantage of new information and communications technologies. In
addition to support for first time registration, these projects gave
greater emphasis to supporting the streamlining of laws and regulations.
They also supported specific institutional reforms, which were generally
premised on the need for a single land administration agency within
government. Support for capacity building has extended beyond government
to support private sector development. Indeed, although the term
governance may not have been specifically applied at that time, these
early efforts were indeed paving out early efforts for the improvement
of governance. Many of these projects specifically included support for
the improvement of land administration service delivery, in order to
facilitate greater accountability and transparency.
Perhaps, commencing around 2000, projects have more explicitly dealt
with issues of corruption and accountability, with some projects
including anti-corruption plans, good governance monitors and internal
audit functions. More formal engagement of civil society organizations
(CSOs) including non-government organizations (NGOs) in some of these
projects has also been facilitated. Of course, NGOs have for even much
longer periods continued to raise concerns, especially on governance and
human rights issues, and recognition of their long-term commitment is
deserved. It is perhaps too early to judge the success of these
projects. Many are still under the initial phases of long-term
implementation. Success will be best judged over the long-term, and
hopefully a good balance has been struck between the commitment of the
respective governments to reform, and the requirements of donors.
Broader land-related issues, such as state land management, also became
more important to include in project designs.
One general principle that has continued to be followed has concerned
the need to develop “critical mass” in the land registration system, as
soon as possible. Such critical mass includes institutional capacity,
the number of titles registered and distributed to land owners, the
amount of state land that has been registered and the quality of land
records and maps.
The most recently designed projects are now investing in the
development of national spatial data infrastructures (NSDI), or at least
whole-of-government land information (system) coordination. There is
also now more concerted integration of different ICT such as geographic
information systems (GIS) and internet applications. On the down-side of
the improvements of technologies, there is sometimes an over-engineering
of the spatial accuracy requirements where low-value, rural land parcels
may be required to be surveyed to the same standards as high-value,
densely populated urban areas. In some cases projects have become too
techno-centric, becoming overly dependent on sophisticated
measurement/positioning technologies such as total stations, Global
Position System (GPS) and Continuously Operating Reference Stations
(CORS) without accruing significant efficiency gains. This is a
particularly important issue when looking at maximizing first
registration coverage, where the greater investment in time and human
resources is on adjudication rather than surveying and mapping.
Disasters have also led to recognition of the need to focus on
computerization of land records and secure data storage. Whilst the
December 2004 tsunami caused severe damage to land offices in Asian
countries such as Indonesia, greater losses of land records are actually
being experienced through fires, both accidental and deliberate. In Aceh
land records for less than 60,000 registered land parcels were destroyed
or severely damaged. A recent fire in land office in Central Java saw
the records for more than 160,000 land parcels destroyed.
3.3. Funding Support for Land Administration Projects
On the lending side, World Bank supported land administration
projects generally seek to alleviate poverty and enhance economic growth
by improving the security of land tenure and efficiency of land markets.
This necessitates the development of an efficient land administration
system that is based on clear and consistent policies and laws,
gender-responsiveness and supported by an appropriate institutional
structure. Lending projects may typically involve: (a) policy, legal and
regulatory reform; (b) institutional reform; (c) systematic land
registration (first time titling); (d) support for the development of
subsequent land transactions; (e) land valuation; (f) improved service
delivery for land agencies; and (g) capacity building for government,
private sector and academe (Bell, 2005).
Table 2 displays total World Bank lending for land administration by
fiscal year (FY) and region. The total amount of lending for projects
under supervision currently stands at around $1.5 billion. The Bank’s
European and Central Asian Region accounts for almost half of the global
lending portfolio of land administration projects, whilst the Latin
American and Caribbean Region accounts for almost one-quarter. Over the
past few years, the African Region’s land administration lending program
has increased significantly, indicative of the priority being given to
the sector in that region. The table also shows that lending in the
South Asian Region, and also the Middle East North African Region,
continues to be modest. Given the importance of land policy for a wide
range of situations, plus the Bank’s shift from project towards
policy-based lending, it is not surprising to find an increasing number
of projects with land policy or land administration components.
In terms of the actual number of Bank-funded projects, Table 3
illustrates that whilst overall lending has increased by almost one-half
billion dollars since 2006, the actual number of projects currently
under supervision (i.e. implementation) is 46, down by almost one-third
since 2006. Therefore, on average the funding on a per project basis has
increased from around US $14 million in 2006 to around US$ 32.5 million
in 2009.
On the analytical side of Bank support to the land administration
sector, Table 4, indicates there is currently around US $3 million, in
funding. The author considers this to be a very conservative estimate.
The above table does not include funding for any global studies that are
being undertaken, including studies on governance and land concessions.
There is also considerable analytical work being undertaken by the Bank
that is land-related, but is not being captured as attributable to the
land administration sector.
3.4. Partnerships with other Institutions
Given the complexity and long-term nature of land-related
institutional development, work on land would not be possible without
having strong partnerships with a wide range of development partners,
civil society organizations and academic institutions (Deininger, 2006).
The Bank actively contributes to recent initiatives such as the High
Level Commission for Legal Empowerment of the Poor, the Global Land
Tools Network and is in regular contact with the private sector through
institutions such as the International Federation of Surveyors (FIG) and
with non-government organizations such through the International Land
Coalition (ILC). The Bank maintains close relationships with United
Nations organizations working in the land sector including Habitat, the
Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) and United Nations Development
Program (UNDP). Whilst some of these partnerships involve direct funding
arrangements, others may be on an in-kind basis. This paper has not
attempted to enumerate these arrangements.
4. KEY LAND ADMINISTRATION ISSUES
This section of this paper attempts to present some of the “headline”
issues being encountered in many developing countries in the land
sector.
4.1. Governance
Good governance is increasingly recognized as critical to effective
development and sustainability. Specifically for the land sector
governance, a fully functioning land and property system is composed of
four building blocks: (a) a system of rules that defines the bundle of
rights and obligations between people and assets reflecting the
multiplicity and diversity of property systems around the world; (b) a
system of governance; (c) a functioning market for the registration,
exchange of assets; and (d) an instrument of social policy. Each of
these components can be dysfunctional, operating against the poor.
Previously, insufficient attention has been given in land-related
development cooperation to the integration of good governance and
safeguards in the design, implementation and impact monitoring of land
administration and management projects. The emphasis has been on
establishing first-time property rights and building capacity,
especially within the civil service. Further emphasis has been in the
areas of policy reform, institutional development and new technology.
However, it is only more recently, as increasing attention to issues of
accountability and transparency, and indeed corruption, which have been
consistently raised by CSOs including NGOs, that attention has been
turned to governance. Good governance is fundamental to achieving the
benefits of the protection of property rights and the development of
efficient and effective land and property markets. In addition, good
governance is essential for the efficient and effective stewardship of
the environment and natural resources
Governments with a record of transparency, accountability and
responsiveness are far more likely to attract investment, provide
high-quality public services and manage resources more cost-effectively
than those which activities are opaque and not open to public scrutiny.
Corruption may breed where government officials have discretion without
accountability, especially in government agencies involved in provision
of services to the public including land, health and education.
Experience suggests that governments typically do not welcome public
scrutiny. While there are many examples of governments opening
themselves to the public through mechanisms such as freedom of
information laws, and others have adopted well-publicized
anti-corruption programs, sometimes under external pressure from donors,
the record of “supply-side” reform has often had mixed results.
Good governance in land administration is not a new issue, and is as
important in the developing world as it is in developed countries.
Efficient, effective, transparent and accountable land administration
services are as much about the administration of land as they are about
the civil service that operates within any country. Typically, reform of
land administration in any country is a long-term prospect requiring
decades of sustained commitment. It is a major investment of capital and
human resources and requires strong and consistent leadership in order
to achieve effective, sustainable outcomes. The World Bank, with the
support of development partners and civil society organizations, are
continuing to support a large volume of land administration projects
throughout the world, each with varying emphases on social equity and
economic development. In post-conflict countries, tenure security and
access to land are major factors in providing long-term stability.
Whilst much has been achieved over the past few decades of support from
the World Bank, it is clear that increasing attention must be given to
good governance.
Good governance in land administration is likely to remain on the
respective agendas of donors, governments, NGOs and civil society. It is
not a subject that will become unfashionable or redundant. Good
governance in land administration is fundamental to the achievement of
the MDG. The success and sustainability of good governance measures for
land administration requires the commitment of governments to genuine
reform rather than just responding to donor priorities.
4.2. Access to Land for Development Investment
The international demand for land by foreign investors, which some
writers have provocatively described by some authors as a form of
”neo-colonialism”, continues to expand throughout all regions of the
developing world. Developing countries, in many cases with weak
governance, are often only too willing to surrender large tracts of
their respective states to international investors for a wide range of
developments including agribusiness, forestry for timber and paper,
mining and extractive industries, tourism, hydro-power, manufacturing
and other purposes including residential development. One of the
lingering impacts of the food price crisis of 2007-2008 was the
proliferation of the acquisition of agricultural land by foreign
investors. Of course, not only was this driven by the needs of food
production, but also by demand for grain crops to produce biofuels. Many
investors have also continued to increase their demands for oil and
other minerals to ensure long-term supplies for their own countries.
Development activities, especially those requiring access to land,
often present fertile ground for mismanagement and corruption. Typically
weak governance, with inappropriate institutional arrangements, and
inadequate capacity to deal with land concessions, provides the
ingredients for land development abuses, including evictions of legal
and informal land occupants. Many countries experiencing the demand for
access to land from foreign investors have significant policy and
regulatory gaps in land policies to effectively manage investments.
Also, it is often noted that these countries experience severe capacity
constraints for the processing of applications, enforcing of safeguards
and monitoring social and environmental impacts. The lack of
transparency and accountability encourages rent seeking and undermining
of good governance.
In addition, the lack of a complete, reliable documented inventory of
state and private land will often allow public officials to give away
state assets with no records of the transactions, or grab land from its
rightful owners. Hence the need for building and maintaining the
cadastre has been given great prominence in World Bank supported
projects and is on the agenda for many other donors.
Decentralization may often present local authorities with a pool of
resources that can be manipulated for individual gain. Access to
information in land offices can be restricted to those willing to pay
“facilitation fees”. Negotiations with potential investors often entail
additional payments to ensure the deal goes through. In all cases once
these practices have been put in place there is great reluctance to
curtail them as the vested interests see benefits in their perpetuation.
At the same time potential investors can be unwilling (or uniformed)
participants in these relationships. The development and dissemination
of clear procedures for land and resource development activities should
lead to consistent and transparent implementation of government
policies.
A large part of the institutional problems associated with the demand
for land and natural resources for development is directly related to
civil service capacity to effectively address these issues. There are a
number of specific, key areas where additional capacity development
needs must be focused. These may relate to:
- Project Screening, viz. How do governments attract appropriate
investment interest? How do governments evaluate these initial
expressions of interest and then encourage these investors to pursue
the development of more formal proposals? How do governments support
investors in focusing their proposals that are in the best interests
of the country?
- Evaluation of proposals, viz. How do governments evaluate land
concession proposals? Are they financially sound and is the business
plan realistic? Does the proposed investment produce economic
benefits? Is the proposal environmentally sustainable and socially
responsible? .
- Public Disclosure, viz. How does government disclose proposed
investments to the public, to industry, and to all relevant agencies
within government? How do people have an opportunity to raise
objections to investments and how are these addressed?
- Project Monitoring and Supervision, viz. How does government
monitor the implementation of the development, including ensuring
that the investor is in compliance with laws, regulations,
safeguards relates to the investment? How does it ensure that the
required reporting takes place and that relevant taxes, concession
fees, etc. are paid to the government?
- Project Documentation, viz. How are records of project
(proposals as well as awarded projects) kept? How are these records
accessed, updated, and used for verification of project performance?
Understandably, many investors may look for the easiest, cheapest,
least regulated place to invest. Therefore it is often the case that
those developing countries, whose major asset is land, and where
governance, institutional arrangements and capacity are weakest will be
targeted. One example of a worst case scenario was revealed by a World
Bank social impact analysis in Columbia, in 2008 where it was
reported:”Various studies indicate that in many cases the expansion of
palm cultivation has been conducted with serious human rights
violations, including forced displacement, massacres, threats, land
confiscation and murders”. (Byerlee, 2009).
It is also alarming to note that investors are often able to do
things in the countries they invest in, that they would not be able to
do in their own home countries. Could not the governments from which the
investments emanate, and where the investors may have their primary
businesses registered, be encouraged to take steps to better regulate
the conduct of their citizens abroad, as has been done in other areas
such as human trafficking, pedophilia and even copyright? Perhaps the
donor and diplomatic representatives for those countries from which
investments emanate, could play a greater role in monitoring and
encouraging responsible behavior.
4.3. Land Acquisition
Acquisition of use or ownership rights to large areas of land for
production of agricultural commodities, forest, or provision of
environmental amenities by large investors has recently attracted
considerable interest. A combination of higher and more volatile global
commodity prices, demand for bio-fuels, population growth and
urbanization, as well as globalization and overall economic development
are likely to imply that such investments will be of great importance in
the future. In many contexts, large-scale acquisitions of land
highlights renewed interest in plantation-based agriculture that is
fuelled by skepticism regarding the effectiveness of market mechanisms
to guarantee access to basic food supplies and the belief that large
scale production can help modernize the agricultural sector. A wave of
press reports illustrates the magnitude of these trends and recent Bank
documents refer to tens of millions of hectares being considered for
potential acquisition for agricultural production or other forms of
natural-resource based use other than mining.
Recognizing that land acquisition and agro-enterprise issues are
interconnected, the World Bank is currently adopting a dual-pronged
approach in response to this phenomenon: (a) dialogue with governments
to define principles, provide guidance, and assess the magnitude of
ongoing trends through empirical research; and (b) a definition of
issues, best practices, decision tools, guidelines and codes of practice
for governments and investors in land-extensive agriculture. With
regards to dialogue, the World Bank has initiated a global study on
large-scale land acquisition for agriculture and natural resource-based
use. The study will take a phased approach, with the first phase
assessing country-level policy frameworks and documenting projects
proposed or implemented in the last five years. If merited, a second
phase will involve more in-depth economic and social analysis of one or
more projects from the country-level project inventory. The initial
phase of the work has received funding of almost US$ 0.5 million, and
covers fifteen countries, and from East Asia the countries selected
include Indonesia, Cambodia, Laos and Thailand. Progress to date
includes:
- Country-level inventories & policy framework. Work is being
undertaken in these 15 countries to provide descriptions of the
policy framework in a comparable format and an inventory of land
acquisitions either for the entire country or a region chosen to be
representative of broader trends.
- Economic and social analysis. Pilot in-depth analysis of social
impacts and economic parameters of specific cases of large-scale
land acquisition is ongoing in a joint effort with other units of
the Bank. Results (to include draft manuals of good practice in both
areas) will provide a basis for expanding to other countries
- Development of key principles.
In addition to the above studies, the Bank is undertaking other work
in East Asia, including studies in Vietnam concerning land acquisition
and also compensation. In Laos, a study is underway to provide a better
basis for dialogue on the difficult challenge of managing land
acquisition for development purposes. In Indonesia two separate studies
are in progress regarding land acquisition for agribusiness development
and a further study regarding infrastructure development.
4.4. Gender Mainstreaming
Gender Mainstreaming is “the process of assessing the implications
for women and men of any planned action, including legislation, policies
or programs, in any area and at all levels. It is a strategy for making
women’s and men’s concerns and experiences an integral dimension of the
design, implementation, monitoring, and evaluation of the policies and
programs in all political, economic and societal spheres so that women
and men benefit equally, and inequality is not perpetuated. The ultimate
goal is to achieve gender equality.” (United Nations, ECOSOC, 1997).
Although the importance of gender has been identified as a
fundamental issue for land administration, especially in terms of
protecting the rights of women in land property, it was not always
included with the same rigor as is currently done. However, this was not
always the case, and it was only as a result of the inclusion of gender
specialists in World Bank task teams, and a better understanding of this
important area grew. In the East Asia Region, the land titling program
of Laos provides an interesting case study. Initially, like in other
projects, it was assumed that land titling by itself would benefit
women, without any specific features to address potential gender
participation needs. However, this rather neutral approach was found to
be inadequate, and one of the early indicators of the likely need for a
“proactive” gender program emerged from a large survey in 1998 by the
Lao Women’s Union (LWU). LWU surveyed a sample of 2000 households in 17
districts, all before land titling. The survey compared the gender
balance from two ways of recognizing land rights, under traditional
customary tenure without land titling where 82 percent of land was
recognized as either the woman’s or in conjugal ownership and under
formal land titling land registered to women or in joint conjugal names
fell to 23 %. The First Land Titling Project (LTP1) was actually then
retrofitted to more pro-actively gender issues, including better
collection of gender ownership data and better community education
programs. Indeed, in 1998, a formal Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
between the implementing agency and the LWU was signed to formalize the
LWU’s participation in the project. Recent reports indicate that around
75% of titles in the Lao capital Vientiane are registered in the name of
women or joint owners and nationally this figure is around 62%.
In the East Asia Region, Laos and Indonesia have been identified as
the World Bank’s two priority countries for gender. In Indonesia, a
study is currently being undertaken into the gender impacts of land
titling in Aceh. This is an especially complex province recovering from
a thirty year civil war which officially only ended in 2005, and also
the catastrophic tsunami disaster of December 2004 which saw up to
200,000 people killed. The report will be delivered in 2010.
4.5. Institutional and Policy Reform
The general experience in World Bank support projects has been that a
pre-requisite for effective implementation of land administration reform
has been the establishment of a single national (or jurisdictional) land
agency which brings together the many public sector functions concerning
land administration, including land registration, surveying, valuation
and administration of state land. For many countries, the lack of a
single agency, with sole responsibility for these functions, has been
the major obstacle to reform. Governments require consistent policy
advice, and the reform agenda may be thwarted by many government
agencies competing for “turf” and providing conflicting advice to the
government. Experience shows that good governance is required in order
for the single land agency model to work as best practice. Of course,
without good governance, the single land agency model can compound the
inherent problems that the country faces. Furthermore, unless there is
need for strong political will for reform in the land sector, in order
for success.
A further institutional issue for effective implementation of land
administration reform is land custodianship. Government agencies such as
Forestry generally have large tracts of state land under their control.
Too often, these agencies act as absolute owners of the state land
rather than managing the use of the land on behalf of the state. In many
countries, laws, sub-decrees and regulations are not harmonized and
there is poor public administration and management of land, which lacks
transparency and accountability. The responsibilities of custodian
agencies should not conflict with the single national land agency which
has overall responsibility for the public administration of land.
The national importance of state land is increasing. It is a finite
resource and governments require an accurate and complete inventory of
state land to ensure that it is managed as a public asset. Increasingly,
governments around the world are approaching state land as an asset
which has to be managed appropriately. For many agencies, the pressure
on the public purse is driving approaches to generate a financial return
from these assets to defray the costs of management, in whole or part.
In generating a return on state land assets, it is important that
governments do not adopt short-term revenue-generating approaches that
are synonymous with a “fire sale”. Once the state land is alienated and
sold to private land interests, the asset is lost. Pressures to generate
revenue may lead to state land of high social, environmental or heritage
value being sold and lost. Thus priority must be given to good policy
development for land concession management to ensure that all
development is sustainable, responsible, accountable and transparent.
However, there may often be blurred dividing lines between state land
and private land, and also the customary land areas. Collectively, these
require a comprehensive approach to the overall public administration of
all land.
Land valuation and property taxation are key areas of policy
development in the land sector. These areas are of significant
importance for collection of revenue that will deliver services to the
public. The need for standards development, regulation setting and
policy, accompanied by testing and piloting is also a long-term
engagement.
The increasing trends towards e-commerce and e-governance are often
seemed to be limited by laws and regulations that only recognize
hardcopy documents and records. Typically the law lags well behind
technology. Therefore, there is an increasing need for the land policy
reform agenda to address ICT. One example in the East Asia Region of
moving ahead in this area has been in Thailand. In terms of the legal
status of digital data, the Electronic Transactions Act 2001 came into
effect in 2002. This Act is based on the United Nations Commission on
International Trade Law Model Laws. It provides for legal effect and
enforceability of electronic data, for requirements for documents to be
in writing to be satisfied by electronic data, for electronic data to be
regarded as original data and for the admissibility of electronic data
as evidence in legal proceedings. In Vietnam, a policy study under the
Vietnam Land Administration Project (VLAP) will commence shortly into
“Developing a legal framework for land information and solutions to
national information infrastructures”.
4.6. Capacity Building
There is no doubt that one of the direct benefits from World Bank
support land administration projects has been the development of
capacity, that has resulted from project implementation. Capacity in key
areas of land administration including land surveying, land
registration, service delivery and service delivery standards, land
records management, policy development, public awareness and education.
In many cases, the Bank’s support through lending and analytical studies
has been complemented by technical assistance provided by donor
partners.
The role of education and training in building capacity to support
land administration and management reform is well established through
World Bank funded land administration projects in East Asia. For more
than ten years the Bank, together with its development partners, has
been supporting the establishment of new higher education programs and
in some cases strengthening established programs. The Thailand Land
Titling Project was the first World Bank funded project in the region to
include capacity building of higher education, and has been assessed as
being remarkably successful. Advances in ICT have played a significant
role in the development of teaching and research methods in developed
countries. However, this has further increased the gap in standards
between rich and poor nations. Land administration higher education in
developing countries is hampered by limited financial resources,
difficulty in attracting academic staff and poor facilities. There is
often a heavy reliance on support from land administration projects. In
addition to building the overall capacity in land administration and
management, a further objective has been to build the capacity of the
education institutions themselves and encourage professional
institutions with private sector participation. In some countries, in
particular Cambodia and the Laos, there were no specific land
administration education programs in place until the catalyst of a World
Bank supported land administration program. In other countries,
including Indonesia and Philippines, the focus has also been on
improving strengthening and updating existing institutions which may
have focused on surveying agrarian development.
Increasing emphasis is being placed on supporting private sector
capacity development. The establishment or strengthening of professional
and industry associations has generally demonstrated to be one useful
means of developing the private sector. In addition, the Bank has been
encouraging the provision of short professional development training
courses, which is especially important for knowledge-sharing and
maintaining competency. Some projects are now outsourcing some
requirements of the project such as surveying and mapping, which can
further serve to develop private sector capacity.
In East Asia the World Bank has collaborated with the International
Federation of Surveyors (FIG) in supporting professional development by
convening regional conferences and Expert Group Meetings (EGM), and
participation at the annual FIG Working Weeks. The World Bank has also
worked with organizations such as the International Institute for
Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation (ITC) and the United
Nations University (UNU) to provide short courses in land administration
education in the region. ITC has strong expertise in land administration
higher education and very large alumni of nationals from countries in
the region, which is frequently featured in the quarterly “ITC News”.
4.7. Sustainability of Land Administration Systems
For the investment in a land administration project to be considered
successful, it should be expected that the developments by the end of
donor engagement are sustainable. Sustainability has many elements
including: (a) capacity; (b) budget; (c) good governance, transparency
and accountability; (d) security of land records from loss, destruction
and fraud; (e) reliable and consistent delivery of services which are
accessible, government commitment and public confidence; to name but a
few.
As mentioned above, there should be sufficient capacity in the public
sector and hopefully also private sector. Land administration agencies
should have sufficient recurrent budget to maintain their operations and
have access to additional investment budgets to undertake the necessary
developments and improvements to maintain their efficiency and
effectiveness. Whilst in many developed countries there are examples of
land administration agencies which are self-funded, from land
registration and other fees they collect, it should never be forgotten
that it has taken a very long time to achieve such a status, and much
longer than the duration of on one or more phases of land administration
project implementation.
The Thailand land titling program is one example of a successful
program that has long been sustained after the donor support had
finished in 2002. The Thai Department of Lands (DoL) has continued to
implement the program, under government funding. A recent technical
review undertaken by the World Bank, noted that the land registration in
Thailand now generates around ten times its operating costs per annum
through fees collected for land transactions and enquiries, although DoL
remains an on-budget agency and all revenue is returned to the Treasury.
In Thailand, the majority of all land transfers are generally completed
in less than three hours. DoL is soon expected to embark on a major
computerization program to improve service delivery and records
management, and has already tested its new systems at fifty office sites
to demonstrate it can achieve completion of transactions in a maximum of
forty minutes.
4.8. Utilization of ICT
Rapid advancements in ICT, construction of optic fiber networks, and
improved telecommunication infrastructure across East Asia is connecting
rural and urban populations. The foundations are being laid for a host
of e-government services and the building of NSDI’s that will reach
beyond cities and into the rural provinces. Improving tenure security
and access to land is central to alleviating poverty and advancing rural
livelihoods. A suite of innovative technologies and solutions are
available to providing East Asia's poorest rural and remote communities
access to land and property services. In Thailand, the Cabinet recently
approved that National ICT Strategic Master Plan 2009-2012, identifying
the NSDI and land information from land registration as being one of the
key pillars.
Increasingly, land administration systems are investing on
integration of different ICT platforms. For example, survey and legal
data are recorded electronically in the field, with plans, maps, records
and title certificates also generated digitally. The outputs may be held
in a relational database, with a GIS spatial system providing indexing
and supporting records management, as well as access for land office
transaction processing and management. Computerized workflow systems may
be used to better manage and monitor land office business applications
with land offices having access through an intranet browser tools. The
digital cadastral database (DCDB) supports the government’s better
collection of land taxes, with a reliable valuation system that is using
computer-assisted mass appraisal GIS software. The public of course, may
have internet access to core services, with the potential to lead to
electronic or online conveyancing (e-conveyancing). But in order to
fully realize the benefits of these technologies, the land registration
system itself needs to be “in order”, containing reliable data, and
focused on holding a complete inventory of land parcels, both state and
private. The public must also have confidence in the government’s land
administration system, so they undertake all of their transactions
within the formal system. Surveyors are more frequently using total
stations and GPS equipment. In some cases, governments see the
establishment of CORS as being fundamental to the geodetic system,
accessible by both the public and private sectors.
4.9. Development of National Spatial Data Infrastructures
Through the nurturing of LIS pilot programs and innovative ICT
applications to land information, the Bank's goals are to promote the
development of national inventories of land ownership and land use
records to support development of robust systems of land administration.
Efforts towards building multipurpose LIS of key national datasets for
NSDI are focused on maturing the core building blocks of appropriate
institutional frameworks, technical standards, identifying fundamental
national datasets, building the enabling technical ICT infrastructure,
and enhancing the available skills base through training and education
programs. Strengthening land administration systems through building
NSDI may support improving tenure, promoting social stability and
reducing conflict, stimulating agricultural and rural productivity,
encouraging land improvement and more sustainable resource management. A
better cadastre, underpinning the NSDI provides a more complete and
reliable basis for taxation collection and better managing state assets.
Through better access to land information, transparency may be increased
and there may be enhanced public disclosure of land-related matters such
as land use plans and development proposals. However, the author
stresses “may” in all of these benefits, as it all depends on whether
good governance prevails with laws being appropriately enforced and
civil servants acting ethically and in the public good.
Duplication of data capture is frequently encountered in land
administration projects. For example in the management of land
concessions, different agencies are all too frequently embarking on
maintaining their own individual digital cadastral databases, perhaps
due to a lack of protocols for data sharing, unclear institutional
mandates or even organizational rivalry. Data should only be captured
once, and the maintenance of data should be the responsibility of the
designated custodian agency. NSDI, which encompasses not only the data,
but the official designation of custodians, and the official protocols
for data sharing will improve the overall efficiency of data collection
and maintenance and enable government decision-making to be more
consistent drawing on the authoritative data sets, with advice from the
designated responsible agency.
The “World Development Report 2010” in the chapter “Managing Land and
Water to Feed Nine Billion People and Protect Natural Systems” stresses
the importance of accurate and timely data, especially from remote
sensing and other geographic information, and the application of ICT,
advising that: “One reason that policy makers have found it so difficult
to curb the overexploitation of land and water and their related
ecosystems is that neither the managers nor the users of the resources
have accurate and timely information.” The Report further advises that:
“Research and development will be necessary to take full advantage of
these new information technologies” and also “More reliable information
can empower communities and change the governance of natural resources”.
Although the term “NSDI” has not been used specifically in the Report,
it most certainly makes a strong case for investment in NSDI.
5. CONCLUSIONS
The World Bank’s engagement in the land sector has continued to
provide fundamental support to land reform in many developing countries
around the globe, for more than three decades. The need for support in
future decades is likely to continue as new challenges emerge and more
countries seek assistance. The knowledge that the World Bank has accrued
in this sector is well recognized, and even countries that don’t require
financial support, are keen often to draw upon this reservoir of
knowledge and experience. The Bank’s strong analytical capacity and
intellectual leadership have allowed its activities to draw on cutting
edge research and experts to show the importance of land issues for
overall economic development and to help countries formulate and build
consensus around national strategies to deal with land in a prioritized
and well-sequenced manner.
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BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES
Keith Clifford Bell joined the World Bank in 2003, after a
distinguished career in the public sector and military in Australia,
culminating as the Surveyor-General of Victoria, 1999-2003. Prior to
this he held senior executive positions in the Planning and Land
Management Authority of the Australian Capital Territory Government, was
the Chief Executive Officer of the Australian New Zealand Land
Information Council and the Director of the National Land Data Center in
the Australian Government. Within the World Bank, he has responsibility
for leading the World Bank’s land administration and management program
throughout the East Asia Region. Based in Washington D.C., he also
advises other World Bank regions including the Middle East and North
Africa, which means he spends most of the travelling. Keith is a
licensed surveyor and professional engineer.
CONTACTS
Keith Clifford Bell
The World Bank, East Asia Pacific Region
1818 H Street, NW
Washington D.C.
USA
Tel. + 1 202 458 1889
Fax + 1 202 477 2733
Email: kbell@worldbank.org
Website: www.worldbank.org
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