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2017 | OriginalPaper | Buchkapitel

Access to Land and Security of Tenure in the Resolutions of the United Nations General Assembly

verfasst von : Margherita Brunori

Erschienen in: Agricultural Law

Verlag: Springer International Publishing

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Abstract

Land governance has historically covered a crucial position in the sphere of national sovereign power and can be described as a matter “which is essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any state.” Nevertheless, since the early years, the United Nations, through its bodies and agencies, has been releasing reports and recommendations on the governance of land. The first objective of this study is to see to what extend there is a degree of consistency—when the issue of land is considered—on the terms with which it is framed, pointedly land access, land/tenure/property rights, and tenure security; the values or more general objectives underpinning the discourse on the matter; the subjects that are identified as bearing a stake with regard to it. The second objective is to evaluate whether there is conceptual clarity on the terms that are employed or whether, on the contrary, in different moments and contexts the same terms refer to different meanings. What emerges from the analysis is that land issues have always been a relevant topic in the General Assembly agenda. Considered originally only for its agricultural production function, during the decades and especially since the '90s, the land discourse has been enriched with considerations pertaining not only to the economic aspect of agricultural production but also to more fundamental needs of individuals and rural societies, such as livelihood, food security, identity, and nondiscrimination. Conversely, what appears also quite clearly is that there is a lack of uniformity in the terminology used.

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Fußnoten
1
Lehavi (2010), pp. 425 et seqq.; see also Cotula (2016), pp. 149 et seqq.
 
2
Article 2, section VII of the United Nations, Charter of the United Nations, 24 October 1945, 1 UNTS XVI. http://​www.​refworld.​org/​docid/​3ae6b3930.​html. Accessed 10 August 2016.
 
3
Irving (1965), pp. 37–45.
 
4
Indeed, the on-going debate within the Working Group of the Right to Development of the Human Rights Council is envisaging the inclusion of the question of the equitable distribution of land in the debate on the operative sub-criteria for the realization of the Right to Development. Malhotra (2013), pp. 393 et seqq.
 
5
See generally Cotula (2012).
 
6
See generally Cotula (2014).
 
7
Article 10 of the United Nations, Charter of the United Nations, 24 October 1945, 1 UNTS XVI. http://​www.​refworld.​org/​docid/​3ae6b3930.​html. Accessed 10 August 2016.
 
8
Arangio-Ruiz sums up saying that resolutions are neither legislative nor sufficient to create state practice not only because the General Assembly is not authorized to legislate but also because its members, do not “mean it.” Arangio-Ruiz (1972), p. 457. See also Schwebel (1979), p. 303 et seqq.
 
9
Sloan (1991), pp. 103 et seqq.
 
10
Sloan continues saying that “If resolutions are adopted with respect to matters that have heretofore been dealt with as a matter of domestic jurisdiction, they may have the effect of transforming them into matters of international concern, not only within the Organization, but in international law and in the broader field of international relations.” Sloan (1991), p. 103.
 
11
“The resolutions adopted by the Assembly therefore reflect the web of activity of the UN system as a whole, even if these are not wholly implemented.” Jordan (1976), p. 648.
 
12
Article 14 (g) “To have access to agricultural credit and loans, marketing facilities, appropriate technology and equal treatment in land and agrarian reform as well as in land resettlement schemes”; Article 16(h): “the same right for both spouses in respect of the ownership … of property”; and Article 15, paragraph 2, “States Parties shall accord to women, in civil matters, a legal capacity identical to that of men and the same opportunities to exercise that capacity. In particular, they shall give women equal rights to conclude contracts and to administer property and shall treat them equally in all stages of procedure in courts and tribunals.” UN General Assembly Resolution 34/180 of 18 December 1979, Convention for the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination Against Women, entered into force on 3 September 1981. http://​www.​un-documents.​net/​a34r180.​htm. Accessed 19 August 2016. Article 14 (g) “To have access to agricultural credit and loans, marketing facilities, appropriate technology and equal treatment in land and agrarian reform as well as in land resettlement schemes”; Article 16(h): “the same right for both spouses in respect of the ownership … of property”; and Article 15, paragraph 2, “States Parties shall accord to women, in civil matters, a legal capacity identical to that of men and the same opportunities to exercise that capacity. In particular, they shall give women equal rights to conclude contracts and to administer property and shall treat them equally in all stages of procedure in courts and tribunals.”
 
13
Anaya and Williams (2001), pp. 84 et seqq.
 
14
Even though some recent research evidenced how “traditional communities” are emerging as a subject of international law and their rights to land are increasingly recognized and protected. Bessa (2015), pp. 330 et seqq.
 
15
Irving (1965), pp. 37–45.
 
16
UN General Assembly Resolution 401, Land Reform A/RES/401 (V) (20 November 1950) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​5. Accessed 21 August 2016.
 
17
UN General Assembly Resolution 524, Land Reform, A/RES/524(VI) (12 January 1952) http://​www.​un.​org/​documents/​ga/​res/​6/​ares6.​htm. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
18
UN General Assembly Resolution 1932, Means of promoting agrarian reform, A/RES/1932(XVIII) (11 December 1932) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​18. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
19
UN General Assembly Resolution 524, Land Reform, A/RES/524 VI (12 January 1952),
 
20
UN General Assembly Resolution 826, Land Reform, A/RES/826 IX (11 December 1954) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​9. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
21
Resolution n°401 of 1950 lists, among the measures that should be given attention, the “appropriate action […] to render financial aid to agricultural workers and tenants and to small and medium-sized farmers through cheap agricultural credit and facilities, comprehensive technical assistance and the promotion of rural cooperatives” and “taxation policies designed to lighten, to the greatest possible extent, the tax burden on tenants and small and medium-sized farmers.” UN General Assembly Resolution 401, Land Reform, A/RES/401 V (20 November 1950) http://​www.​un.​org/​documents/​ga/​res/​5/​ares5.​htm. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
22
With regard to the first aspect, Resolution n° 524 states that associations should be supported and assisted in the organization; Resolution n° 826 more generally recommends the “protection of free establishment of agricultural associations” and the respect of “such institutions of the indigenous population as may be compatible with economic and social progress and modern techniques.” UN General Assembly Resolution 524, Land Reform, A/RES/524 VI (12 January 1952); UN General Assembly Resolution 826, Land Reform, A/RES/826 IX (11 December 1954).
 
23
UN General Assembly Resolution 402 Development of Arid Lands A/RES/402 V (20 November 1950) http://​www.​un.​org/​documents/​ga/​res/​5/​ares5.​htm. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
24
In Resolution n°524 VI the General Assembly expresses its conviction that “the form which an equitable and useful re-distribution of the ownership of land should take depends […] of the relationship between density of population, the supply of land and other resources.”
 
25
UN General Assembly Resolution 826, Land Reform, A/RES/826 IX (11 December 1954).
 
26
UN General Assembly Resolution 1828 Land Reform A/RES/1828 XVII (18 December 1962) http://​www.​un.​org/​documents/​ga/​res/​17/​ares17. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
27
UN General Assembly Resolution 524, Land Reform, A/RES/524 VI (12 January 1952).
 
28
ECOSOC (1969), p. 3; ILO (1966)
 
29
ILO R132 Tenants and Share-croppers Recommendation, 1968 (No. 132) Recommendation concerning the Improvement of Conditions of Life and Work of Tenants, Share-croppers and Similar Categories of Agricultural Workers. Adoption: Geneva, 52nd ILC session (25 Jun 1968) http://​www.​ilo.​org/​dyn/​normlex/​en/​f?​p=​NORMLEXPUB:​12100:​0:​:​NO:​:​P12100_​INSTRUMENT_​ID:​312470. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
30
That occurred in Japan, Republic of Korea, and Taiwan Republic of China. Historically this kind of reform proved to be successful: indeed, the knowledge and the experience allowed the tenants to profit of the improved situations. Cox et al. (2003), p. 14.
 
31
The many state-led reforms that were carried on during this period had as a main aim the raising of productivity of underutilized land, which was often held by few large landowners, to foster the economic growth of the country and enhance social equity. Those reforms brought to a substantive progress in the redistribution of property rights, and factors of their success related closely to the strength of the government’s political commitment, and the level of assistance provided after the tenure change, and the institutional and legal set-up. Cox et al. (2003), p. 14.
 
32
UN General Assembly Resolution 2542 Declaration on Social Progress and Development A/RES/2542 (11 December 1969) http://​www.​ohchr.​org/​Documents/​ProfessionalInte​rest/​progress.​pdf. Accessed 19 August 2016. Adopted by 119 votes to none, with 2 abstentions; Universal Declaration on the Eradication of Hunger and Malnutrition, adopted on 16 November 1974 by the World Food Conference convened under UN General Assembly Resolution 3180 (XXVIII) of 17 December 1973, endorsed by UN General Assembly Resolution 3348 (XXIX) of 17 December 1974. www.​ohchr.​org/​EN/​ProfessionalInte​rest/​Pages/​EradicationOfHun​gerAndMalnutriti​on.​aspx. Accessed 19 August 2016; FAO (1981) The Peasants’ Charter. Declaration of principles and Programme of action of the World Conference on Agrarian Reform and Rural Development. FAO, Rome, http://​www.​fao.​org/​docrep/​U8719E/​U8719E00.​htm. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
33
Alston (1994), p. 143.
 
34
Udombana (2000), p. 782.
 
35
In Article 6 of the Declaration it is stated that “Social progress and development require the participation of all members of society in productive and socially useful labour and the establishment, in conformity with human rights and fundamental freedoms and with the principles of justice and the social function of property, of forms of ownership of land and of the means of production which preclude any kind of exploitation of man, ensure equal rights to property for all and create conditions leading to genuine equality among people.” UN General Assembly Resolution 2542 Declaration on Social Progress and Development A/RES/2542 (11 December 1969).
 
36
UN General Assembly Resolution 2542 Declaration on Social Progress and Development A/RES/2542 (11 December 1969).
 
37
In the same approach moves the Article 11(a) of the International Covenant of Economic Social and Cultural Rights, adopted by the General Assembly in 1966, 3 years before the endorsement of the Declaration on Social Progress and Development, by saying that States Parties “shall take necessary measures to improve methods of production, conservation and distribution of food […] by developing or reforming agrarian systems in such a way as to achieve the most efficient development and utilization of natural resources.” UN General Assembly, International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), 16 December 1966, United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 993, p. 3, available at: http://​www.​refworld.​org/​docid/​3ae6b36c0.​html. Accessed 24 February 2016.
 
38
Official records of the United Nations General Assembly, twenty-fourth session, Third Committee, 1688th meeting. Monday, 3 November 1969, at 11.5 a.m., New York. http://​www.​un.​org/​documents/​ga/​res/​34/​. Accessed 5 September 2016.
 
39
ICESCR, art. 11 para 2 a.
 
40
FAO (1981).
 
41
UN General Assembly Resolution 34/14 World Conference on Agrarian Reform and Rural Development A/RES/34/14 (9 November 1979) http://​www.​un.​org/​documents/​ga/​res/​34/​a34res14.​pdf. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
42
The Resolution affirms that “in accordance with their national plans, [developing countries] will give priority to programmes for adaptation of institutional frameworks so as to allow wider and more equitable access to land and water resources, as well as effective management of forests, pastures, water and other natural resources in their national interests.” UN General Assembly Resolution 35/56 International Development Strategy for the Third United Nations Development Decade A/RES/35/56 (5 December 1980) http://​www.​un.​org/​documents/​ga/​res/​35/​a35r56e.​pdf. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
43
FAO (1981), pp. 3–6.
 
44
FAO (1981), pp. 9 et seqq.
 
45
FAO (1981), p. 11.
 
46
According to Plant, “while the language in these documents is cautious – as might be expected from a declaration approved by almost every government in the world – the overall trends in the conclusions are clear enough.” Plant (1984), pp. 190–191.
 
47
Plant (1984), p. 191.
 
48
In 1975 the World Bank released a “Land Reform Policy Paper,” whose four key messages were the importance of owner-operated family farms, secure property rights to land, a policy and regulatory environment that promotes transfers to more efficient land uses, and a more egalitarian asset distribution. As a consequence, the WB policy recommended that communal tenure systems be abandoned in favor of freehold titles and the subdivision of commons. Binswaner and Deininger (1999), p. 248.
 
49
Atkins claims that the dismissal of land reform from the development agenda of the 80’s is due to a misconception of land reform itself, and affirms that the features of land ownership and size are a result of power and are directly connected with the power structure of a given context. To properly address the issue, a land reform should consider both those features (land ownership and size of holdings) and the power dynamics. Atkins (1988), pp. 935–946.
 
50
Lilleør and Lund-Sørensen (2013), p. 2. See also Shaw (2009).
 
51
Cox et al. (2003), p. 15.
 
52
UN General Assembly Resolution 36/186 Situation of food and agriculture in Africa A/RES/36/186 (17 December 1981) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​36. Accessed 19 August 2016; UN General Assembly Resolution 37/245 Situation of food and agriculture in Africa A/RES/37/245 (21 December 1982) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​37. Accessed 19 August 2016; UN General Assembly Resolution 37/245 Food Problems A/RES/37/247 (21 December 1982) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​37. Accessed 19 August 2016; UN General Assembly Resolution 38/158 Food Problems A/RES/38/158 (21 December 1982) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​38. Accessed 19 August 2016; UN General Assembly Resolution 38/159 Critical situation of food and agriculture in Africa A/RES/38/159 (19 December 1983) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​38. Accessed 19 August 2016; UN General Assembly Resolution 39/166 Food and agricultural problems A/RES/39/166 (17 December 1984) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​39. Accessed 19 August 2016; UN General Assembly Resolution 40/181 Food and agricultural problems A/RES/40/181 (17 December 1985) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​40. Accessed 19 August 2016; UN General Assembly Resolution 41/191 Food and agricultural problems A/RES/41/191 (8 December 1981) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​41. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
53
UN General Assembly Resolution 45/199 Development Strategy for the Fourth UN Development Decade A/RES/45/199 (21 December 1990) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​45. Accessed 21 August 2016; UN General Assembly Resolution 51/240 Agenda for Development A/RES/51/240 (20 June 1997) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​51. Accessed 21 August 2016.
 
54
Agenda 21 Programme of Action for Sustainable Development. UN GAOR, 46th Sess., Agenda Item 21, UN Doc A/Conf.151/26 (1992). https://​sustainabledevel​opment.​un.​org/​index.​php?​page=​view&​nr=​23&​type=​400&​menu=​35. Accessed 19 August 2016. See on this point FAO (2002b), para II.
 
55
Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development, Annex, at 5, U.N. Doc. A/CONF.171/13 (18 October 1994) (Cairo Conference 2015). https://​www.​unfpa.​org/​sites/​default/​files/​event-pdf/​PoA_​en.​pdf. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
56
Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development and in the Programme of Action of the World Summit for Social Development A/CONF.166/9 (14 March 1995). http://​www.​un.​org/​documents/​ga/​conf166/​aconf166-9.​htm. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
57
Also the outcome of the World Food Summit, held in Rome from 13 to 17 November 1996, dedicated a part of the final document to land, but it was not endorsed by the General Assembly, rather “welcomed” by it in Resolution n°171 of 1997. UN General Assembly Resolution 51/171 Food and sustainable agricultural development A/RES/51/171 (16 December 1997). http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​51. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
58
Bessa (2015), p. 332. Convention on biological diversity. Rio de Janeiro, 5 June 1992.
 
59
Agenda 21 and the Programme of Action of the World Summit for Social Development insert the land question in the framework of overcoming poverty or rural poverty.
 
60
Agenda 21, para 3.8.f.
 
61
Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development, Action 9.6.
 
62
Programme of Action of the World Summit for Social Development, para 32.f.
 
63
Agenda 21, para 7.27.
 
64
Shaw (2009), pp. 90 et seqq.
 
65
Cox et al. (2003), p. 16.
 
66
Binswaner and Deininger (1999), p. 248.
 
67
UN Document A/65/281 Item 69 (b) of the provisional agenda. Promotion and protection of human rights: human rights questions including alternative approaches for improving the effective enjoyment of human rights and fundamental freedoms. Right to Food (11 August 2010), p. 10. https://​documents-dds-ny.​un.​org/​doc/​UNDOC/​GEN/​N10/​482/​30/​PDF/​N1048230.​pdf?​OpenElement. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
68
See e.g. the case of Land Reform in Honduras promoted by the World Bank, Brunori (2013), pp. 333 et seqq.
 
69
In 1999 the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights adopted the General Comment n°12 on the Right to adequate food, which explicates the link between the right to food and the access to land and natural resources. UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR), General Comment No. 12: The Right to Adequate Food (Art. 11 of the Covenant) (12 May 1999) available at: http://​www.​refworld.​org/​docid/​4538838c11.​html. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
70
The Resolutions continue with saying that “sustainable and gender-sensitive agricultural policies are important tools for promoting land and agrarian reform, rural credit and insurance, technical assistance and other associated measures to achieve food security and rural development; and that support by States for small farmers, fishing communities and local enterprises is a key element for food security and the provision of the right to food.” UN General Assembly Resolution 63/187 Right to food A/RES/63/187 (18 December 2008) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​63. Accessed 19 August 2016 (see also Resolutions A/RES/64/159, A/RES/65/220, A/RES/66/158, A/RES/67/174). The Resolutions continue with saying that “sustainable and gender-sensitive agricultural policies are important tools for promoting land and agrarian reform, rural credit and insurance, technical assistance and other associated measures to achieve food security and rural development; and that support by States for small farmers, fishing communities and local enterprises is a key element for food security and the provision of the right to food.”
 
71
Resolution n°60 of 2006 welcomes the adoption by the Council of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations of the Voluntary Guidelines to Support the Progressive Realization of the Right to Adequate Food in the Context of National Food Security; UN General Assembly Resolution 60/165 The right to food A/RES/60/165 (2 March 2006) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​60. Accessed 19 August 2016; Resolution n° 61 of 2006 takes note of the final Declaration adopted at the International Conference on Agrarian Reform and Rural Development of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations in Porto Alegre, Brazil, on 10 March 2006 (C/2006/REP). UN General Assembly Resolution 61/164 The right to food A/RES/61/164 (19 December 2006) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​61. Accessed 19 August 2016; Resolution n°174 of 2013 Recalling the endorsement of the Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests in the Context of National Food Security by the Committee on World Food Security at its 38th session, held on 11 May 2012, and by the Council of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations at its 144th session. UN General Assembly Resolution 67/174 The right to food A/RES/67/174 (20 December 2012) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​67. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
72
Wiessner (2011), pp. 138 et seqq.; Gómez Isa (2016), pp. 196–197.
 
73
Despite without the unanimous consent of the General Assembly.
 
74
UN General Assembly Resolution 61/295 United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples A/RES/61/295 (2 October 2007) http://​www.​refworld.​org/​docid/​471355a82.​html. Accessed 13 August 2016.
 
75
UN General Assembly Resolution 65/178 Agriculture development and food security A/RES/65/178 (20 December 2010) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​65. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
76
UN General Assembly Resolution 66/220 Agriculture development and food security A/RES/66/220 (22 December 2011) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​66. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
77
UN General Assembly Resolution 65/178 Agriculture development and food security A/RES/65/178 (20 December 2010) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​65. Accessed 19 August 2016; UN General Assembly Resolution 67/228 Agriculture development and food security A/RES/67/228 (22 December 2011) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​66. Accessed 19 August 2016; UN General Assembly Resolution 67/228 Agriculture development and food security A/RES/67/228 (21 December 2012) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​67. Accessed 19 August 2016; UN General Assembly Resolution 68/233 Agriculture development, food security and nutrition A/RES/68/233 (20 December 2013) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​68. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
78
In 2009, during the 64th General Assembly annual session, it can be remarked a quite clear division between developing countries, declaring their commitment toward attracting foreign investments in agriculture by converting fallow lands, developed countries, rather looking forward to the UN initiatives on land guideline, and Bolivia and Venezuela that stress for small-agriculture, traditional knowledge and peasants control of land. General Assembly Official Records, 66th Plenary meeting, Monday, 21 December, 3 p.m. A/64/PV.66 http://​www.​un.​org/​en/​ga/​search/​view_​doc.​asp?​symbol=​A/​64/​PV.​66. Accessed 19 August 2016. In the 67th and 68th annual sessions’ resolutions there is wide emphasis in the welcoming of the VGGTs, and in the call for their diffusion and implementation. General Assembly Official Records, 71st Plenary meeting Friday, 20 December 2013, 10 a.m. A/68/PV.71 http://​www.​un.​org/​en/​ga/​search/​view_​doc.​asp?​symbol=​A/​68/​PV.​71. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
79
It appears that the level of protection encompassed in this document is not fully consistent, passing from the recognition and enforcement to the weaker “take into account.” UN General Assembly Resolution 67/196 Guiding Principles on Alternative Development A/RES/67/196 (21 December 2012) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​67. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
80
The draft Guidelines adopted for the International Conference on Alternative Development (ICAD I) held in Thailand in 2011, and in the background Document of the ICAD II which has recently taken place in November 2015 in Thailand, has dedicated an important part of the agenda on access to land, highlighting the link between unsecure land tenure and illicit crops cultivation, and the importance of more secure access to land for the alternative development. http://​www.​icad2.​com/​about_​ICAD2.​html. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
81
For a detailed analysis of the meanings of “access to land,” see Sect. 3.1.
 
82
UN General Assembly Resolution 57/253 World Summit on Sustainable Development A/RES/57/253 (20 December 2002) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​57. Accessed 19 August 2016; UN General Assembly Resolution 66/288 The future we want A/RES/66/288 (27 July 2012) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​66. Accessed 19 August 2016; UN General Assembly Resolution 70/1 Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development A/RES/70/1 (25 September 2002) http://​research.​un.​org/​en/​docs/​ga/​quick/​regular/​70. Accessed 19 August 2016.
 
83
FAO CFS (2012) Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests in the Context of National Food Security (VGGTs). http://​www.​refworld.​org/​docid/​5322b79e4.​html. Accessed 20 August 2016, para 3.1.1.; Paoloni and Onorati (2014), pp. 3 et seqq.
 
84
FAO CFS (2012), para 4.1.
 
85
Agenda 2030, Sustainable Development Goal 1.4.
 
86
See, for example, De Schutter (2010) and Gilbert (2013).
 
87
Coomans (2006).
 
88
UN-HABITAT (2008).
 
89
Draft declaration on the rights of peasants and other people working in rural areas presented by the Chair-Rapporteur of the working group (6 March 2017) UN Doc A/HRC/WG.15/4/2, art 19.6. For a survey on the negotiation process see Golay (2015).
 
90
Agenda 21, para 7.27.
 
91
FAO CFS (2012), para 4.1. Furthermore, the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation quotes, at part II, lett. e: “Recognize that traditional and direct dependence on renewable resources and ecosystems, including sustainable harvesting, continues to be to the cultural, economic and physical well-being of indigenous people and their communities.” UN General Assembly Resolution n°57/253 supra note 82. The 2007 Indigenous Peoples’ Declaration in the preamble affirms that “control by indigenous peoples over developments affecting them and their lands, territories and resources will enable them to maintain and strengthen their institutions, cultures and traditions, and to promote their development in accordance with their aspirations and needs.” UN General Assembly Resolution n° 61/295.
 
92
FAO (2002a) “the relationship, whether legally or customarily defined, among people, as individuals or groups, with respect to land”; UN-HABITAT (2008) “the set of relationships legally or customarily defined between people and land directly, and between individuals and groups of people in their dealings in land.”
 
93
VGGTs Preface: “how people, communities and others gain access to land, fisheries and forests is defined and regulated by societies through systems of tenure” FAO CFS (2012) supra note 83; Tenure and ETFOL (2004), para 2.1.3: “system of access to and control over land and related resources.”
 
94
Tenure and ETFOL (2004), para 2.1.3.
 
95
FAO CFS (2012) Supra note 83. Preface: “The governance of tenure is a crucial element in determining if and how people, communities and others are able to acquire rights, and associated duties, to use and control land, fisheries and forests.” World Summit for Social Development 1995 supra note 56 Chapter II, 23: Poverty is inseparably linked to lack of control over resources, including land, skills, knowledge, capital and social connections.
 
96
FAO (2002a) p. 7.
 
97
Ibid.
 
98
Tenure and ETFOL (2004), para 2.1.3.
 
99
Payne and Durand-Lasserve (2013), p. 8.
 
100
Wisborg (2013), p. 1201.
 
101
Monsalve Suarez (2012), p. 4.
 
102
Ostrom and Schlager (1992), in IIED (2000), pp. 41 et seqq.
 
103
Tenure ETFOL (2004), para 6.1.1.
 
104
FAO CFS (2012), para 8.8.
 
105
FAO CFS (2012) para 8. Access right is a locally or legally recognized right to enter a defined physical area—IIED Tenure Lexicon (2000), p. 10.
 
106
The situation is not different in the Inter-American Court of Human Rights [IACtHR] practice: in the Saramaka v Suriname case land rights, property rights and tenure rights are used. Case of the Saramaka People v Suriname, Saramaka People v Suriname, Interpretation of the judgment on preliminary objections, merits, reparations and costs, IACtHR Series C No 185, IHRL 3058 (IACtHR 2008), 12th August 2008, Inter-American Court of Human Rights [IACtHR]. http://​opil.​ouplaw.​com/​view/​10.​1093/​law:​ihrl/​3058iachr08.​case.​1/​law-ihrl-3058iachr08. Accessed 20 August 2016.
 
107
Assies (2009), pp. 573 et seqq. Another example of this use is found in the Seufert and Monsalve Suarez (2015), p. 28.
 
108
Johannesburg Plan of Implementation (2002), supra note 82: “b) Promote and support efforts and initiatives to secure equitable access to land tenure and clarify resource rights and responsibilities”; Cairo Conference (1994), supra note 55: “actively support access to ownership or use of land and access to water”; UN General Assembly Resolution 65/178, supra note 75: Recognizing that smallholder farmers, including women and indigenous peoples, may not have the equitable access to tools, markets and land tenure rights that is needed for them to reach their productive potential”; UN General Assembly Resolution 66/220, supra note 76: “access by agricultural producers, in particular small producers, women, indigenous peoples and people living in vulnerable situations, to […] secure land tenure.”
 
109
Agenda 21, para 3.8.
 
110
UN General Assembly Resolution 70/1, supra note 82 at Sustainable Development Goals 1.4 and 2.3.
 
111
E.g. see UN General Assembly Resolution 2542 Declaration on Social Progress and Development A/RES/2542 (11 December 1969), supra note 32 at Article 6; Agenda 2030 UN General Assembly Resolution 70/1, supra note 82 at Sustainable Development Goals 1.4 and 2.3.
 
112
Okoth-Ogendo (1987), pp. 226–227.
 
113
Ibid.
 
114
IIED (2000), p. 41.
 
115
UN General Assembly Resolution 70/1 Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development A/RES/70/1 (25 September 2002).
 
116
“For their full benefits to materialize, rights to land and natural resources must be secure. “Secure” land tenure is the language used in the Voluntary Guidelines and the Rio+20 Outcome Document. Focusing solely on “access” to land does not guarantee that an individual or community has effective control over the longer term, limiting their confidence to invest and use the land. In addition, it may limit the applicability to legislative frameworks. This is especially true for women. Likewise, language that refers to “ownership” only does not capture the range of individual and collective tenure arrangements that vary among and within countries, and may unintentionally exclude some of these countries.” NGO (2015), p. 5.
 
117
UN Habitat (2015), p. 2.
 
118
Bazoglu (2011), p. 36.
 
119
Sjaastad and Bromley (2000), pp. 365–389.
 
120
Barrows and Roth (1990), p. 292.
 
121
FAO (1981), p. 11.
 
122
UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR), General Comment No. 4: The Right to Adequate Housing (Art. 11 (1) of the Covenant), 13 December 1991, E/1992/23. http://​www.​refworld.​org/​docid/​47a7079a1.​html Accessed 20 August 2016.
 
123
“All forms of tenure should provide all persons with a degree of tenure security which guarantees legal protection against forced evictions that are inconsistent with States’ existing obligations under national and international law, and against harassment and other threats.” FAO CFS (2012), para 4.4.
 
124
FAO CFS (2012), para 10.16.
 
125
De Schutter (2010), p. 334.
 
126
FAO CFS (2012), p. 4.
 
127
IIED (2015), p. 1. For the idea of “operationalize equity” see Morgera (2014).
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Access to Land and Security of Tenure in the Resolutions of the United Nations General Assembly
verfasst von
Margherita Brunori
Copyright-Jahr
2017
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-64756-2_13