Table of Contents - 6
List of figures - 10
Preface - 12
Acknowledgement - 20
1 PERCEPTION OF LAND TENURE SECURITY - 22
1.1 A book on land tenure security - 22
1.2 Hunger for land - 24
1.3 Land reform is not new - 26
1.4 Structure of the book - 27
2 FIELDS, LAND, ACCESS TO LAND AND STEWARDSHIP OF LAND - 32
2.1 Economics and rights to land - 32
2.2 Land and sea - 39
2.3 Stewardship - 42
2.4 Is land transferable? - 47
2.5 Are we tenants or owners? - 49
2.6 Buying and selling of (rights to) land - 53
2.7 Some land near Bethlehem? - 57
2.8 Returning to Bethlehem - 60
2.9 Part of a field near Bethlehem belonging to Boaz - 63
2.10 Purchasing a parcel of land near Bethlehem - 66
2.11 Just a field near Bethlehem in Judea? - 68
3 PEOPLE IN TRANSITION - 74
3.1 The chairman of the collective farm - 74
3.2 Private individual ownership of rights to land - 79
3.3 Urban property - 84
3.4 Rural life - 88
3.5 From customary to statutory land tenure - 93
3.5.1 Questioning change - 93
3.5.2 Introduction to statutory land tenure - 95
3.5.3 Statutory land tenure together with customary rules? - 98
3.6 Legal pluralism and self-rule - 102
3.7 The practice of indigenous self-rule - 106
3.7.1 Tuva - 106
3.7.2 Northern Canada - 109
3.7.3 What does self-rule mean in daily practice? - 111
4 PRIVATIZATION OF FARMLAND IN FORMER COMMUNIST COUNTRIES - 124
4.1 Reversing the collectivization of farmland - 124
4.2 Sovchozy and kolchozy - 125
4.3 Janis and Vaiva - 128
4.4 Problems of large-scale farming - 131
4.5 Legislation regulating land reform - 133
4.6 Different land reform projects - 135
4.7 Where are my (former) fields? - 136
4.8 Limitations on the size of the land - 138
4.9 Constraints for creating successful private farms - 140
4.10 The actual process of de-collectivization - 142
4.11 Institutional framework for restitution - 144
4.12 Data on restituted land - 149
4.13 Land registration/cadastre and a market economy - 151
4.14 Opportunities to establish a land registration - 154
4.15 Land reform; almost done? - 155
4.16 Privatization in hindsight - 157
5 RAPID RESULTS AND POSTPONED PROBLEMS OR THOROUGH RESEARCH AND SUSTAINED SOLUTIONS? - 164
5.1 Land tenure and land reform - 164
5.2 The economic growth paradigm and the food security paradigm - 167
5.3 Land tenure change in post communist countries - 168
5.4 A new approach to rights to common land - 172
5.5 Development of land tenure systems - 175
5.6 Danger of limited dimensional approaches - 177
5.7 Individual ownership - 179
5.8 Communal ownership - 181
5.9 Individual and communal tenure systems - 185
5.10 Evolutionary theory of land rights - 186
5.11 Additional measures for sustainable solutions - 190
5.12 The challenge: designing an idiosyncratic system - 192
6 LAND TENURE SECURITY IN A UNITED EUROPE - 198
6.1 Increased insecurity? - 198
6.2 Second home or pie in the sky? - 199
6.3 Registration of rights to land - 203
6.4 Four types of land registration - 207
6.5 Criteria for land registration to protect rights to land - 209
6.6 Comprehensive comparison between positive and negative systems - 213
6.7 Moment of transfer of rights to land - 216
6.8 Security of rights to land offered by the government - 218
6.9 Title insurance - 220
6.10 Title insurance and existing land registrations - 225
7 MEASURES AND LAND TENURE SECURITY - 228
7.1 Measures - 228
7.2 The metric system - 232
7.3 Land registration in the USA - 235
7.4 Economic interest - 242
7.5 Landed property - 245
7.6 The final decision maker - 248
7.7 Pursuing land tenure security - 250
Glossary - 258
Index - 266