Experiences and Development Impacts of Securing Land Rights at Scale in Developing Countries: Case Studies of China and Vietnam
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Approach and Methodology
3. Assessment and Results of Case Studies
3.1. China
3.1.1. The Legal Framework to Register Land Rights
3.1.2. Documenting, Registering and Certifying Land Rights
3.1.3. Developing a Unified and Sustainable Registration System
3.1.4. Development Impacts
3.2. Vietnam
3.2.1. The Legal Framework to Register Land Rights
3.2.2. Documenting, Registering and Certifying Land Rights
- 20.2 million LURCs for agricultural land, representing 90% total area;
- 2.0 million LURCs of forestland, representing 98% total area;
- 13.0 million LURCs of rural residential land, representing 94% total area;
- 5.3 million LURCs of urban residential land, representing 97% total area; and
- 0.3 million LURCs for special purpose land, representing 85% total area.
3.2.3. Developing a Unified and Sustainable Registration System
3.2.4. Development Impacts
4. Discussion
4.1. Flexible Legal Frameworks
4.2. Land Registration Without a Precise Spatial Framework
4.3. Land Registration with a Precise Spatial Framework
4.4. Unified Land Registration Systems
4.5. Development Contributions of Secured Land Rights
4.6. Lessons Learnt and Challenges
- Strong political commitment. Political commitment is crucial to securing land rights at scale. As land registration was part of fundamental economic reforms to move from a socialist planned economic system to a market-based economic system in China, Vietnam and Ethiopia and part of comprehensive reforms to recover from civil war and genocide in Rwanda, there was strong political commitment to land registration from the highest to the lowest level of government. The political commitment carried the day.
- Flexible legal framework. Flexibility in legal frameworks facilitates the adoption of some emerging registration approaches that are fast, affordable and scalable to register land rights for all.
- Registration based on imprecise spatial framework. Registering land rights mostly on the basis of textual data, without a precise spatial framework, and with limited use of land professionals is a low-cost, affordable, scalable and upgradable approach best suited for first round registration especially for low value rural land as was demonstrated by China, Vietnam and Ethiopia in the 1990s and 2000s. But with rapidly declining costs and easier access to aerial imagery, the option of adding a spatial framework (based on aerial imagery) to textual data is increasingly becoming realistic.
- Registration using mostly aerial imagery for a spatial framework. Adding a spatial framework based mostly on orthophotos and high resolution satellite imagery as an upgrade from first round registration has proven to be a scalable cost-effective land registration approach as it minimizes the use of expensive ground survey equipment while maximizing the use of non-professionals (with short training) in place of surveyors and land lawyers to demarcate and adjudicate land. In fact, Rwanda covered the registration of all its rural and urban lands using only aerial imagery (orthophotos of 0.4 m resolution and satellite imagery of 0.5 m resolution) while China, Vietnam and Ethiopia supplemented aerial imagery with ground surveying only in areas where either physical boundaries were not visible or land values were high with a potential to cause contestation of land boundaries.
- Developing a unified digital registration system. Developing a unified digital registration system is feasible and improves efficiency, transparency, protection of data quality and integrity, and facilitation of information sharing. Rwanda has done it and it has been beneficial. China, Vietnam and, to a less extent, Ethiopia (for rural land) have also done and it has started to pay off.
- Keeping land registration data updated. In Vietnam, Ethiopia and Rwanda, registration of subsequent transactions after the first round of certification was difficult because registration forms used in the latter were in a format that could not allow the recording of subsequent transactions. In the second round of land certification (the tail end of first registration in the case of Rwanda), the forms were redesigned and digitized, and systems were developed to enable registration of subsequent transactions. Another challenge related to the maintenance of land registration, at least in the case of Rwanda where the issue was closely monitored, is that registration of subsequent land transactions has remained relatively low for rural land mainly because registration charges have been high relative to the value of land. The government of Rwanda has been considering options to address it including reducing registration charges for rural land while increasing those for urban land to effect cross-subsidization since urban land is of higher value. In China and Vietnam, there are no reported issues of registration of subsequent transactions presumably because land values in both rural and urban areas are high enough to cover land registration charges. As for Ethiopia whose land registration coverage includes a lot of rural low-value land, the registration of sub-sequent land transactions has not been an issue so far presumably because many of the rural land offices have not started charging registration fees given that the new national rural land administration information system is still being installed and many land offices have not been covered yet [64].
- Addressing land tenure insecurity and informality in urban slums. While registration of urban land in the four case study countries has gone well, notwithstanding the poor quality of cadastral mapping in the case of Ethiopia [65], the formalization of informal settlements and registration of land rights in urban slums are still inadequate despite great improvements made by Vietnam and China. For example, the percentage of the urban population living in slums declined from about 44 in 1990 to about 25 in 2018 in China and from 61 in 1990 to 14 in 2018 in Vietnam compared to the decline from 96 in 1990 to 64 in 2018 in Ethiopia and from 96 in 1990 to 42 in 2018 in Rwanda [36]. The prevalence of slums especially in the African countries of Ethiopia and Rwanda remains a serious development challenge.
- Registering customary land rights. While China and Rwanda have virtually no customary or communal land tenure systems left, Vietnam and Ethiopia still have them but the latter has successfully piloted approaches which are being scaled up to register land rights especially for pastoralist groups [69]. Vietnam, on the other hand has registered most of the customary lands which are found in the mountainous and forest areas occupied by indigenous ethnic communities which account for about 13 percent of Vietnam’s total population [70]. Vietnam’s customary land tenure systems are recognized under state laws and, before the lands are registered and land use rights certificates (LURCs) issued, the land-owning communities are organized into legal entities on the basis of Bylaws [70]. The main challenge customary land tenure systems face in Vietnam, like in many other countries especially in Africa, is how to organize the land-owning groups into legal entities and to strengthen their capacity to manage their land, forestry, pastoral and other natural resources [5].
5. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Country | Population Est. 2020 (Millions) | No. of Rural Arable Land Parcels | |
---|---|---|---|
Year | Millions | ||
China | 1439 | 2008 | 1500 |
Vietnam | 97 | 2002 | 70 |
Ethiopia | 115 | 2019 | 50 |
Rwanda | 13 | 2012 | 12 |
Total | 1664 | 1632 |
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Byamugisha, F.F.K. Experiences and Development Impacts of Securing Land Rights at Scale in Developing Countries: Case Studies of China and Vietnam. Land 2021, 10, 176. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10020176
Byamugisha FFK. Experiences and Development Impacts of Securing Land Rights at Scale in Developing Countries: Case Studies of China and Vietnam. Land. 2021; 10(2):176. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10020176
Chicago/Turabian StyleByamugisha, Frank F. K. 2021. "Experiences and Development Impacts of Securing Land Rights at Scale in Developing Countries: Case Studies of China and Vietnam" Land 10, no. 2: 176. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10020176
APA StyleByamugisha, F. F. K. (2021). Experiences and Development Impacts of Securing Land Rights at Scale in Developing Countries: Case Studies of China and Vietnam. Land, 10(2), 176. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10020176