மூன்றடுக்கு நில நிர்வாக முறை-பாண்டிசேரி மாநில நில நிர்வாக வரலாறு பாகம்-6

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மூன்றடுக்கு நில நிர்வாக முறை-பாண்டிசேரி மாநில நில நிர்வாக வரலாறு பாகம்-6
The Mozambican Land Law of 1997 has been referred to as one of the best in the world, for the way in which it protects and codifies local people’s land rights. The law aims to balance different objectives and structures within one official tenure system. While accommodating ‘traditional’ community land rights, the law also protects equal rights for men and women based on the principle of non-discrimination in the Mozambican Constitution. The Land Law further has provisions that open up for external and larger-scale investments in agriculture, forestry, and natural resource extraction. According to the law, the absence of a formal title shall not prejudice (traditional) land use and benefit rights; but it also provides procedures for formalising land rights for local communities, individuals and corporations. A central dilemma in the implementation of the Mozambican Land Law is that resources are needed both to claim legally established rights, and to be able to benefit from them.
Much of DR Congo's rainforest is still untouched, but authorities are deviding the country in zones for conservation and commersial use. This process is not without conflict. A new report on local mapping from the Rainforest Foundation shows ways to solve the forest question in DR Congo in the future.