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Making Secure Land Tenure Count for Global Development Goals and National Policy: Evidence from Zambia

Daniel Ayalew Ali, Klaus Deininger, Dorothea Huberta Maria Hilhorst, Frank Kakungu and Yuanyuan Yi

No 8912, Policy Research Working Paper Series from The World Bank

Abstract: Adding a module designed to measure land tenure-related Sustainable Development Goals indicators to the 2018 round of Zambia's labor force survey shows low transferability and high levels of tenure insecurity. Having a title is associated with greater transferability and reduced insecurity. Although demand for titles, including willingness to pay, is high, current policies limit the scope for tenure regularization and reinforce rather than reduce gender discrimination. Efforts in this direction need to be preceded by (i) procedural reform to reduce costs, streamline procedures, and make them gender-sensitive; (ii) institutional change to increase the efficiency of service delivery and ensure record maintenance; and (iii) legal change to recognize customary tenure and improve land management and transferability. Adding the Sustainable Development Goals land tenure module to ongoing surveys has the potential to provide the evidence base needed to design results-based approaches for the land sector and reliably track progress.

Keywords: Gender and Development; Legal Reform; Legislation; Regulatory Regimes; Social Policy; Common Property Resource Development; Legal Products; Judicial System Reform; Food Security; Agricultural Economics (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019-06-25
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-agr and nep-env
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (3)

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