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Property Rights and Sustainable Natural Resource Management

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Type: Journal Article
Author: Poudel, Krishna Lal; Johnson, Thomas G.; Tewari, Rachna
Journal: Environmental Management and Sustainable Development
Volume: 5
Page(s): 30-40
Date: 2016
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10535/10111
Sector: General & Multiple Resources
Region:
Subject(s): ecosystems
forests
institutions
property rights
Abstract: "Property rights and the role they play in sustainable natural resource management, good governance and empowerment of poor communities is gaining significant attention in development and environmental programming. Literature and practical experience are increasingly drawing attention to property rights as an important consideration in rural empowerment and sustainable management of land and natural resources. Moreover, development agencies are increasingly recognizing property rights as a critical factor determining how land and natural resources are used and managed, and how benefits from these resources are distributed. The purpose of this paper is to provide an overview of critical property rights concepts for non-property rights specialists involved in design and implementation of natural resource programs. This paper has four sections. Section 1 defines property rights in the context of land and natural resources. It illustrates why practitioners should consider property rights when pursuing sustainable natural resource management, good governance, and socioeconomic empowerment objectives. Section 2 is an overview of critical concepts in property rights, specifically, the notion of 'bundles of rights', the range of property rights regimes (e.g., private, community, state), the nature of property rights and factors critical for security of rights. Section 2 also provides an overview of the kinds of property rights frequently encountered in the non-Western context, as well as property rights reforms that many states and donors are currently implementing in the natural resource and governance arena. Section 3 begins with a short series of key observations for natural resource programmers about property rights reforms. It then explores five important challenges to achieving the best fit between property rights systems and environmental or development objectives, drawing from a variety of land and natural resource sectors and issues such as agriculture, fisheries, forest resource use and biodiversity conservation. Specific topics addressed comprise managing and channeling changing market incentives; harmonizing with government policies, with a focus on decentralization and devolution; building on customary property rights regimes; balancing equity and efficiency; and enforcement of property rights in a changing world.1 While this piece serves as an introduction to property rights for natural resource specialists, ARD’s Land Tenure and Property Rights Framework and associated tools may be used for guidance on operational integration of land and property rights issues into broader development, including natural resource, programs (ARD, 2005). The LTPR Framework places land and property rights concerns within the context of governance viewed broadly, economic growth, natural resource management, and poverty reduction. The associated materials include: an assessment tool for identifying land and property rights issues in any given location, a survey of land and property rights concerns in USAID presence countries, and an assessment of the severity of property rights issues in each of these USAID presence countries. Section 3 also analyzes specific policies, experiences and interventions where consideration of property rights has, or could have, successfully informed and strengthened a natural resource program. Finally, Section 4 summarizes key principles in land and property rights reforms with implications for natural resource management, governance and livelihood security in rural areas"

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